CrossEntropyLoss¶
-
class
torch.nn.
CrossEntropyLoss
(weight=None, size_average=None, ignore_index=- 100, reduce=None, reduction='mean', label_smoothing=0.0)[source]¶ This criterion computes the cross entropy loss between input and target.
It is useful when training a classification problem with C classes. If provided, the optional argument
weight
should be a 1D Tensor assigning weight to each of the classes. This is particularly useful when you have an unbalanced training set.The input is expected to contain raw, unnormalized scores for each class. input has to be a Tensor of size either or with for the K-dimensional case. The latter is useful for higher dimension inputs, such as computing cross entropy loss per-pixel for 2D images.
The target that this criterion expects should contain either:
Class indices in the range where is the number of classes; if ignore_index is specified, this loss also accepts this class index (this index may not necessarily be in the class range). The unreduced (i.e. with
reduction
set to'none'
) loss for this case can be described as:where is the input, is the target, is the weight, is the number of classes, and spans the minibatch dimension as well as for the K-dimensional case. If
reduction
is not'none'
(default'mean'
), thenNote that this case is equivalent to the combination of
LogSoftmax
andNLLLoss
.Probabilities for each class; useful when labels beyond a single class per minibatch item are required, such as for blended labels, label smoothing, etc. The unreduced (i.e. with
reduction
set to'none'
) loss for this case can be described as:where is the input, is the target, is the weight, is the number of classes, and spans the minibatch dimension as well as for the K-dimensional case. If
reduction
is not'none'
(default'mean'
), then
Note
The performance of this criterion is generally better when target contains class indices, as this allows for optimized computation. Consider providing target as class probabilities only when a single class label per minibatch item is too restrictive.
- Parameters
weight (Tensor, optional) – a manual rescaling weight given to each class. If given, has to be a Tensor of size C
size_average (bool, optional) – Deprecated (see
reduction
). By default, the losses are averaged over each loss element in the batch. Note that for some losses, there are multiple elements per sample. If the fieldsize_average
is set toFalse
, the losses are instead summed for each minibatch. Ignored whenreduce
isFalse
. Default:True
ignore_index (int, optional) – Specifies a target value that is ignored and does not contribute to the input gradient. When
size_average
isTrue
, the loss is averaged over non-ignored targets. Note thatignore_index
is only applicable when the target contains class indices.reduce (bool, optional) – Deprecated (see
reduction
). By default, the losses are averaged or summed over observations for each minibatch depending onsize_average
. Whenreduce
isFalse
, returns a loss per batch element instead and ignoressize_average
. Default:True
reduction (string, optional) – Specifies the reduction to apply to the output:
'none'
|'mean'
|'sum'
.'none'
: no reduction will be applied,'mean'
: the weighted mean of the output is taken,'sum'
: the output will be summed. Note:size_average
andreduce
are in the process of being deprecated, and in the meantime, specifying either of those two args will overridereduction
. Default:'mean'
label_smoothing (float, optional) – A float in [0.0, 1.0]. Specifies the amount of smoothing when computing the loss, where 0.0 means no smoothing. The targets become a mixture of the original ground truth and a uniform distribution as described in Rethinking the Inception Architecture for Computer Vision. Default: .
- Shape:
Input: where C = number of classes, or with in the case of K-dimensional loss.
Target: If containing class indices, shape where each value is , or with in the case of K-dimensional loss. If containing class probabilities, same shape as the input.
Output: If
reduction
is'none'
, shape or with in the case of K-dimensional loss. Otherwise, scalar.
Examples:
>>> # Example of target with class indices >>> loss = nn.CrossEntropyLoss() >>> input = torch.randn(3, 5, requires_grad=True) >>> target = torch.empty(3, dtype=torch.long).random_(5) >>> output = loss(input, target) >>> output.backward() >>> >>> # Example of target with class probabilities >>> input = torch.randn(3, 5, requires_grad=True) >>> target = torch.randn(3, 5).softmax(dim=1) >>> output = loss(input, target) >>> output.backward()