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relatedSymptoms.py
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relatedSymptoms.py
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import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
import re
# read in the 50-dimensional GloVe vectors
def read_glove_vecs(file):
with open(file, 'r') as f:
words = set()
word_to_vec_map = {}
for line in f:
line = line.strip().split()
word = line[0]
words.add(word)
word_to_vec_map[word] = np.array(line[1:], dtype=np.float64)
return words, word_to_vec_map
words, word_to_vec_map = read_glove_vecs('data/cui2vec_pretrained.txt')
df = pd.read_csv('disease-symptom-merged.csv')
# reorganises the dataframe by grouping the data by symptoms instead of by diseases
frame = pd.DataFrame(df.groupby(['Symptom', 'Disease']).size()).drop(0, axis = 1)
# the first entry contains only the disease and no symptom, so it is dropped
frame = frame.iloc[1:]
# set the index of the dataframe as 'Symptom'
frame = frame.reset_index().set_index('Symptom')
# get the counts of each symptom, ie, how many times it occurs in the data set
counts = {}
for i in frame.index:
counts[i] = counts.get(i, 0) + 1
# sort the symptoms by their counts in descending order and save it into a dataframe
import operator
sym, ct = zip(*sorted(counts.items(), key = operator.itemgetter(1), reverse = True))
sym_count = pd.DataFrame()
sym_count['Symptom'] = sym
sym_count['Count'] = ct
#sym_count.to_csv('Symptom Counts.csv')
# drop the symptoms that have fewer than 6 entries in the data set
[frame.drop(i, inplace = True) for i in frame.index if counts[i] < 2]
# extract all the diseases present in the data set and make them into a list, for use later on
diseaseLst = []
frame.Disease.map(lambda x: diseaseLst.append(x))
lst = diseaseLst
# For us to train our own word embeddings on top of the existing GloVe representation, we are going to use the skipgram model.
# Each symptom has a disease associated with it, and we use this as the (target word, context word) pair for skipgram generation.
# The 'skipgrams' function in Keras samples equal no. of context and non-context words for a given word from the distribution,
# and we are going to do the same here.
# First we'll make a list that stores the pair and its corresponding label of 1, if the disease is indeed associated with
# the symptom, and 0 otherwise.
couples_and_labels = []
import random
# run through the symptoms
for i in frame.index.unique():
# make a temporary list of the diseases associated with the symptom (actual context words)
a = list(frame.Disease.loc[i].values)
# loop through the context words
for j in a:
# randomly select a disease that isn't associated with the symptom, to set as a non-context word with label 0,
# by using the XOR operator, that finds the uncommon elements in the 2 sets
non_context = random.choice(list(set(lst) ^ set(a)))
# add labels of 1 and 0 to context and non-context words repectively
couples_and_labels.append((i, j, 1))
couples_and_labels.append((i, non_context, 0))
# the entries in the couples_and_labels list now follow the pattern of 1, 0, 1, 0 for the labels. We shuffle it up.
b = random.sample(couples_and_labels, len(couples_and_labels))
# Extract the symptoms, the diseases and the corresponding labels
symptom, disease, label = zip(*b)
np.save('./data/all-files-for-ml/symptom.npy', symptom)
# Transform them into series' to get unique entries in each ('set()' not used as it generates a different order each time
# and the index(number) associated with a word changes each time the program is run)
s1 = pd.Series(list(symptom))
s2 = pd.Series(list(disease))
dic = {}
# Map each word in the symptoms and diseases to a corresponding number that can be fed into Keras
for i,j in enumerate(s1.append(s2).unique()):
dic[j] = i
# Now all the symptoms are represented by a number in the arrays 'symptoms', and 'diseases'
symptoms = np.array(s1.map(dic), dtype = 'int32')
diseases = np.array(s2.map(dic), dtype = 'int32')
# Make the labels too into an array
labels = np.array(label, dtype = 'int32')
dictDf = pd.DataFrame.from_dict(dic, orient='index')
dictDf.reset_index(drop=False, inplace=True)
dictDf.columns = ['Key', 'Values']
dictDf.to_csv('./data/all-files-for-ml/Dictionary.csv', index=True, header=True)
d = pd.read_csv('./data/all-files-for-ml/Dictionary.csv')
lst = []
# size of the vocabulary ,ie, no. of unique words in corpus
vocab_size = len(dic)
# dimension of word embeddings
vector_dim = 500
# create an array of zeros of shape (vocab_size, vector_dim) to store the new embedding matrix (word vector representations)
embedding_matrix = np.zeros((len(dic), 500))
# loop through the dictionary of words and corresponding indexes
for word, index in dic.items():
# split each symptom/disease into a list of constituent words
for i in word.split():
if i in word_to_vec_map.keys(): #only if in glove!
lst.append(word_to_vec_map[i]) # add the embeddings of each word in symptoms and diseases to list 'lst'
# make an array out of the list
arr = np.array(lst)
# sum the embeddings of all words in the sentence, to get an embedding of the entire sentence
# if in the entire sentence, word embeddings weren't available in GloVe vectors, make that sentence into a
# zero array of shape (50,), just as a precaution, as we have already removed such words
arrsum = arr.sum(axis = 0)
# normalize the values
arrsum = arrsum/np.sqrt((arrsum**2).sum())
# add the embedding to the corresponding word index
embedding_matrix[index,:] = arrsum
#import necessary keras modules
from keras.preprocessing import sequence
from keras.layers import Dot, Reshape, Dense, Input, Embedding
from keras.models import Model
# START BUILDING THE KERAS MODEL FOR TRAINING
input_target = Input((1,))
input_context = Input((1,))
# make a Keras embedding layer of shape (vocab_size, vector_dim) and set 'trainable' argument to 'True'
embedding = Embedding(
input_dim = vocab_size,
output_dim = vector_dim,
input_length = 1,
name='embedding',
trainable = True)
# load pre-trained weights(embeddings) from 'embedding_matrix' into the Keras embedding layer
embedding.build((None,))
embedding.set_weights([embedding_matrix])
# run the context and target words through the embedding layer
context = embedding(input_context)
context = Reshape((vector_dim, 1))(context)
target = embedding(input_target)
target = Reshape((vector_dim, 1))(target)
# compute the dot product of the context and target words, to find the similarity
# (dot product is usually a measure of similarity)
dot = Dot(axes = 1)([context, target])
dot = Reshape((1,))(dot)
# pass it through a 'sigmoid' activation neuron;
#this is then comapared with the value in 'label' generated from the skipgram
out = Dense(1, activation = 'sigmoid')(dot)
# create model instance
model = Model(input = [input_context, input_target], output = out)
model.compile(loss = 'binary_crossentropy', optimizer = 'adam', metrics=['accuracy'])
# fit the model, default batch_size of 32
# running for 25 epochs seems to generate good enough results, although running for more iterations
#may improve performance further
model.fit(x = [symptoms, diseases], y = labels, epochs = 6)
# get the new weights (embeddings) after running through keras
new_vecs = model.layers[2].get_weights()[0]
# Each time the model is run, it generates a different loss at the end, and consequently, different word embeddings after each run.
# It is common to save the trained weights once they are seen to be performing well
# I have saved the weights after 25 epochs and an end loss of 0.232, the screenshot of which I've attached, and can be loaded like this:
np.save('./data/all-files-for-ml/10_epochs_0.6_similarity.npy', new_vecs)