import functools import torch import torch.nn.functional as F def reduce_loss(loss, reduction): """Reduce loss as specified. Args: loss (Tensor): Elementwise loss tensor. reduction (str): Options are "none", "mean" and "sum". Return: Tensor: Reduced loss tensor. """ reduction_enum = F._Reduction.get_enum(reduction) # none: 0, elementwise_mean:1, sum: 2 if reduction_enum == 0: return loss elif reduction_enum == 1: return loss.mean() elif reduction_enum == 2: return loss.sum() def weight_reduce_loss(loss, weight=None, reduction='mean', avg_factor=None): """Apply element-wise weight and reduce loss. Args: loss (Tensor): Element-wise loss. weight (Tensor): Element-wise weights. reduction (str): Same as built-in losses of PyTorch. avg_factor (float): Average factor when computing the mean of losses. Returns: Tensor: Processed loss values. """ # if weight is specified, apply element-wise weight if weight is not None: loss = loss * weight # if avg_factor is not specified, just reduce the loss if avg_factor is None: loss = reduce_loss(loss, reduction) else: # if reduction is mean, then average the loss by avg_factor if reduction == 'mean': loss = loss.sum() / avg_factor # if reduction is 'none', then do nothing, otherwise raise an error elif reduction != 'none': raise ValueError('avg_factor can not be used with reduction="sum"') return loss def weighted_loss(loss_func): """Create a weighted version of a given loss function. To use this decorator, the loss function must have the signature like `loss_func(pred, target, **kwargs)`. The function only needs to compute element-wise loss without any reduction. This decorator will add weight and reduction arguments to the function. The decorated function will have the signature like `loss_func(pred, target, weight=None, reduction='mean', avg_factor=None, **kwargs)`. :Example: >>> import torch >>> @weighted_loss >>> def l1_loss(pred, target): >>> return (pred - target).abs() >>> pred = torch.Tensor([0, 2, 3]) >>> target = torch.Tensor([1, 1, 1]) >>> weight = torch.Tensor([1, 0, 1]) >>> l1_loss(pred, target) tensor(1.3333) >>> l1_loss(pred, target, weight) tensor(1.) >>> l1_loss(pred, target, reduction='none') tensor([1., 1., 2.]) >>> l1_loss(pred, target, weight, avg_factor=2) tensor(1.5000) """ @functools.wraps(loss_func) def wrapper(pred, target, weight=None, reduction='mean', avg_factor=None, **kwargs): # get element-wise loss loss = loss_func(pred, target, **kwargs) loss = weight_reduce_loss(loss, weight, reduction, avg_factor) return loss return wrapper def convert_to_one_hot(targets: torch.Tensor, classes) -> torch.Tensor: """This function converts target class indices to one-hot vectors, given the number of classes. Args: targets (Tensor): The ground truth label of the prediction with shape (N, 1) classes (int): the number of classes. Returns: Tensor: Processed loss values. """ assert (torch.max(targets).item() < classes), 'Class Index must be less than number of classes' one_hot_targets = torch.zeros((targets.shape[0], classes), dtype=torch.long, device=targets.device) one_hot_targets.scatter_(1, targets.long(), 1) return one_hot_targets