|
from typing import List, Optional |
|
|
|
from torch import Tensor |
|
from .module import Module |
|
from .utils import _single, _pair, _triple |
|
from .. import functional as F |
|
|
|
from ..common_types import (_size_any_t, _size_1_t, _size_2_t, _size_3_t, |
|
_ratio_3_t, _ratio_2_t, _size_any_opt_t, _size_2_opt_t, _size_3_opt_t) |
|
|
|
__all__ = ['MaxPool1d', 'MaxPool2d', 'MaxPool3d', 'MaxUnpool1d', 'MaxUnpool2d', 'MaxUnpool3d', |
|
'AvgPool1d', 'AvgPool2d', 'AvgPool3d', 'FractionalMaxPool2d', 'FractionalMaxPool3d', 'LPPool1d', |
|
'LPPool2d', 'AdaptiveMaxPool1d', 'AdaptiveMaxPool2d', 'AdaptiveMaxPool3d', 'AdaptiveAvgPool1d', |
|
'AdaptiveAvgPool2d', 'AdaptiveAvgPool3d'] |
|
|
|
class _MaxPoolNd(Module): |
|
__constants__ = ['kernel_size', 'stride', 'padding', 'dilation', |
|
'return_indices', 'ceil_mode'] |
|
return_indices: bool |
|
ceil_mode: bool |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_any_t, stride: Optional[_size_any_t] = None, |
|
padding: _size_any_t = 0, dilation: _size_any_t = 1, |
|
return_indices: bool = False, ceil_mode: bool = False) -> None: |
|
super(_MaxPoolNd, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = kernel_size |
|
self.stride = stride if (stride is not None) else kernel_size |
|
self.padding = padding |
|
self.dilation = dilation |
|
self.return_indices = return_indices |
|
self.ceil_mode = ceil_mode |
|
|
|
def extra_repr(self) -> str: |
|
return 'kernel_size={kernel_size}, stride={stride}, padding={padding}' \ |
|
', dilation={dilation}, ceil_mode={ceil_mode}'.format(**self.__dict__) |
|
|
|
|
|
class MaxPool1d(_MaxPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 1D max pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
In the simplest case, the output value of the layer with input size :math:`(N, C, L)` |
|
and output :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` can be precisely described as: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
out(N_i, C_j, k) = \max_{m=0, \ldots, \text{kernel\_size} - 1} |
|
input(N_i, C_j, stride \times k + m) |
|
|
|
If :attr:`padding` is non-zero, then the input is implicitly padded with negative infinity on both sides |
|
for :attr:`padding` number of points. :attr:`dilation` is the stride between the elements within the |
|
sliding window. This `link`_ has a nice visualization of the pooling parameters. |
|
|
|
Note: |
|
When ceil_mode=True, sliding windows are allowed to go off-bounds if they start within the left padding |
|
or the input. Sliding windows that would start in the right padded region are ignored. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: The size of the sliding window, must be > 0. |
|
stride: The stride of the sliding window, must be > 0. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size`. |
|
padding: Implicit negative infinity padding to be added on both sides, must be >= 0 and <= kernel_size / 2. |
|
dilation: The stride between elements within a sliding window, must be > 0. |
|
return_indices: If ``True``, will return the argmax along with the max values. |
|
Useful for :class:`torch.nn.MaxUnpool1d` later |
|
ceil_mode: If ``True``, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape. This |
|
ensures that every element in the input tensor is covered by a sliding window. |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, L_{in})` or :math:`(C, L_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` or :math:`(C, L_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
L_{out} = \left\lfloor \frac{L_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding} - \text{dilation} |
|
\times (\text{kernel\_size} - 1) - 1}{\text{stride}} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.MaxPool1d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
.. _link: |
|
https://github.com/vdumoulin/conv_arithmetic/blob/master/README.md |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_1_t |
|
stride: _size_1_t |
|
padding: _size_1_t |
|
dilation: _size_1_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.max_pool1d(input, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, self.dilation, ceil_mode=self.ceil_mode, |
|
return_indices=self.return_indices) |
|
|
|
|
|
class MaxPool2d(_MaxPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 2D max pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
In the simplest case, the output value of the layer with input size :math:`(N, C, H, W)`, |
|
output :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` and :attr:`kernel_size` :math:`(kH, kW)` |
|
can be precisely described as: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
\begin{aligned} |
|
out(N_i, C_j, h, w) ={} & \max_{m=0, \ldots, kH-1} \max_{n=0, \ldots, kW-1} \\ |
|
& \text{input}(N_i, C_j, \text{stride[0]} \times h + m, |
|
\text{stride[1]} \times w + n) |
|
\end{aligned} |
|
|
|
If :attr:`padding` is non-zero, then the input is implicitly padded with negative infinity on both sides |
|
for :attr:`padding` number of points. :attr:`dilation` controls the spacing between the kernel points. |
|
It is harder to describe, but this `link`_ has a nice visualization of what :attr:`dilation` does. |
|
|
|
Note: |
|
When ceil_mode=True, sliding windows are allowed to go off-bounds if they start within the left padding |
|
or the input. Sliding windows that would start in the right padded region are ignored. |
|
|
|
The parameters :attr:`kernel_size`, :attr:`stride`, :attr:`padding`, :attr:`dilation` can either be: |
|
|
|
- a single ``int`` -- in which case the same value is used for the height and width dimension |
|
- a ``tuple`` of two ints -- in which case, the first `int` is used for the height dimension, |
|
and the second `int` for the width dimension |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window to take a max over |
|
stride: the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
padding: implicit zero padding to be added on both sides |
|
dilation: a parameter that controls the stride of elements in the window |
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the max indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful for :class:`torch.nn.MaxUnpool2d` later |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in}, W_{in})` |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{H_{in} + 2 * \text{padding[0]} - \text{dilation[0]} |
|
\times (\text{kernel\_size[0]} - 1) - 1}{\text{stride[0]}} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{W_{in} + 2 * \text{padding[1]} - \text{dilation[1]} |
|
\times (\text{kernel\_size[1]} - 1) - 1}{\text{stride[1]}} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool of square window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.MaxPool2d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> # pool of non-square window |
|
>>> m = nn.MaxPool2d((3, 2), stride=(2, 1)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50, 32) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
.. _link: |
|
https://github.com/vdumoulin/conv_arithmetic/blob/master/README.md |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_2_t |
|
stride: _size_2_t |
|
padding: _size_2_t |
|
dilation: _size_2_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.max_pool2d(input, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, self.dilation, ceil_mode=self.ceil_mode, |
|
return_indices=self.return_indices) |
|
|
|
|
|
class MaxPool3d(_MaxPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 3D max pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
In the simplest case, the output value of the layer with input size :math:`(N, C, D, H, W)`, |
|
output :math:`(N, C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` and :attr:`kernel_size` :math:`(kD, kH, kW)` |
|
can be precisely described as: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
\begin{aligned} |
|
\text{out}(N_i, C_j, d, h, w) ={} & \max_{k=0, \ldots, kD-1} \max_{m=0, \ldots, kH-1} \max_{n=0, \ldots, kW-1} \\ |
|
& \text{input}(N_i, C_j, \text{stride[0]} \times d + k, |
|
\text{stride[1]} \times h + m, \text{stride[2]} \times w + n) |
|
\end{aligned} |
|
|
|
If :attr:`padding` is non-zero, then the input is implicitly padded with negative infinity on both sides |
|
for :attr:`padding` number of points. :attr:`dilation` controls the spacing between the kernel points. |
|
It is harder to describe, but this `link`_ has a nice visualization of what :attr:`dilation` does. |
|
|
|
Note: |
|
When ceil_mode=True, sliding windows are allowed to go off-bounds if they start within the left padding |
|
or the input. Sliding windows that would start in the right padded region are ignored. |
|
|
|
The parameters :attr:`kernel_size`, :attr:`stride`, :attr:`padding`, :attr:`dilation` can either be: |
|
|
|
- a single ``int`` -- in which case the same value is used for the depth, height and width dimension |
|
- a ``tuple`` of three ints -- in which case, the first `int` is used for the depth dimension, |
|
the second `int` for the height dimension and the third `int` for the width dimension |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window to take a max over |
|
stride: the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
padding: implicit zero padding to be added on all three sides |
|
dilation: a parameter that controls the stride of elements in the window |
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the max indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful for :class:`torch.nn.MaxUnpool3d` later |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
D_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{D_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[0] - \text{dilation}[0] \times |
|
(\text{kernel\_size}[0] - 1) - 1}{\text{stride}[0]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{H_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[1] - \text{dilation}[1] \times |
|
(\text{kernel\_size}[1] - 1) - 1}{\text{stride}[1]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{W_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[2] - \text{dilation}[2] \times |
|
(\text{kernel\_size}[2] - 1) - 1}{\text{stride}[2]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool of square window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.MaxPool3d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> # pool of non-square window |
|
>>> m = nn.MaxPool3d((3, 2, 2), stride=(2, 1, 2)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50,44, 31) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
.. _link: |
|
https://github.com/vdumoulin/conv_arithmetic/blob/master/README.md |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_3_t |
|
stride: _size_3_t |
|
padding: _size_3_t |
|
dilation: _size_3_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.max_pool3d(input, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, self.dilation, ceil_mode=self.ceil_mode, |
|
return_indices=self.return_indices) |
|
|
|
|
|
class _MaxUnpoolNd(Module): |
|
|
|
def extra_repr(self) -> str: |
|
return 'kernel_size={}, stride={}, padding={}'.format( |
|
self.kernel_size, self.stride, self.padding |
|
) |
|
|
|
|
|
class MaxUnpool1d(_MaxUnpoolNd): |
|
r"""Computes a partial inverse of :class:`MaxPool1d`. |
|
|
|
:class:`MaxPool1d` is not fully invertible, since the non-maximal values are lost. |
|
|
|
:class:`MaxUnpool1d` takes in as input the output of :class:`MaxPool1d` |
|
including the indices of the maximal values and computes a partial inverse |
|
in which all non-maximal values are set to zero. |
|
|
|
.. note:: :class:`MaxPool1d` can map several input sizes to the same output |
|
sizes. Hence, the inversion process can get ambiguous. |
|
To accommodate this, you can provide the needed output size |
|
as an additional argument :attr:`output_size` in the forward call. |
|
See the Inputs and Example below. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size (int or tuple): Size of the max pooling window. |
|
stride (int or tuple): Stride of the max pooling window. |
|
It is set to :attr:`kernel_size` by default. |
|
padding (int or tuple): Padding that was added to the input |
|
|
|
Inputs: |
|
- `input`: the input Tensor to invert |
|
- `indices`: the indices given out by :class:`~torch.nn.MaxPool1d` |
|
- `output_size` (optional): the targeted output size |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out})` or :math:`(C, H_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = (H_{in} - 1) \times \text{stride}[0] - 2 \times \text{padding}[0] + \text{kernel\_size}[0] |
|
|
|
or as given by :attr:`output_size` in the call operator |
|
|
|
Example:: |
|
|
|
>>> # xdoctest: +IGNORE_WANT("do other tests modify the global state?") |
|
>>> pool = nn.MaxPool1d(2, stride=2, return_indices=True) |
|
>>> unpool = nn.MaxUnpool1d(2, stride=2) |
|
>>> input = torch.tensor([[[1., 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]]]) |
|
>>> output, indices = pool(input) |
|
>>> unpool(output, indices) |
|
tensor([[[ 0., 2., 0., 4., 0., 6., 0., 8.]]]) |
|
|
|
>>> # Example showcasing the use of output_size |
|
>>> input = torch.tensor([[[1., 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]]]) |
|
>>> output, indices = pool(input) |
|
>>> unpool(output, indices, output_size=input.size()) |
|
tensor([[[ 0., 2., 0., 4., 0., 6., 0., 8., 0.]]]) |
|
|
|
>>> unpool(output, indices) |
|
tensor([[[ 0., 2., 0., 4., 0., 6., 0., 8.]]]) |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_1_t |
|
stride: _size_1_t |
|
padding: _size_1_t |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_1_t, stride: Optional[_size_1_t] = None, padding: _size_1_t = 0) -> None: |
|
super(MaxUnpool1d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = _single(kernel_size) |
|
self.stride = _single(stride if (stride is not None) else kernel_size) |
|
self.padding = _single(padding) |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor, indices: Tensor, output_size: Optional[List[int]] = None) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.max_unpool1d(input, indices, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
class MaxUnpool2d(_MaxUnpoolNd): |
|
r"""Computes a partial inverse of :class:`MaxPool2d`. |
|
|
|
:class:`MaxPool2d` is not fully invertible, since the non-maximal values are lost. |
|
|
|
:class:`MaxUnpool2d` takes in as input the output of :class:`MaxPool2d` |
|
including the indices of the maximal values and computes a partial inverse |
|
in which all non-maximal values are set to zero. |
|
|
|
.. note:: :class:`MaxPool2d` can map several input sizes to the same output |
|
sizes. Hence, the inversion process can get ambiguous. |
|
To accommodate this, you can provide the needed output size |
|
as an additional argument :attr:`output_size` in the forward call. |
|
See the Inputs and Example below. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size (int or tuple): Size of the max pooling window. |
|
stride (int or tuple): Stride of the max pooling window. |
|
It is set to :attr:`kernel_size` by default. |
|
padding (int or tuple): Padding that was added to the input |
|
|
|
Inputs: |
|
- `input`: the input Tensor to invert |
|
- `indices`: the indices given out by :class:`~torch.nn.MaxPool2d` |
|
- `output_size` (optional): the targeted output size |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = (H_{in} - 1) \times \text{stride[0]} - 2 \times \text{padding[0]} + \text{kernel\_size[0]} |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = (W_{in} - 1) \times \text{stride[1]} - 2 \times \text{padding[1]} + \text{kernel\_size[1]} |
|
|
|
or as given by :attr:`output_size` in the call operator |
|
|
|
Example:: |
|
|
|
>>> pool = nn.MaxPool2d(2, stride=2, return_indices=True) |
|
>>> unpool = nn.MaxUnpool2d(2, stride=2) |
|
>>> input = torch.tensor([[[[ 1., 2., 3., 4.], |
|
[ 5., 6., 7., 8.], |
|
[ 9., 10., 11., 12.], |
|
[13., 14., 15., 16.]]]]) |
|
>>> output, indices = pool(input) |
|
>>> unpool(output, indices) |
|
tensor([[[[ 0., 0., 0., 0.], |
|
[ 0., 6., 0., 8.], |
|
[ 0., 0., 0., 0.], |
|
[ 0., 14., 0., 16.]]]]) |
|
>>> # Now using output_size to resolve an ambiguous size for the inverse |
|
>>> input = torch.torch.tensor([[[[ 1., 2., 3., 4., 5.], |
|
[ 6., 7., 8., 9., 10.], |
|
[11., 12., 13., 14., 15.], |
|
[16., 17., 18., 19., 20.]]]]) |
|
>>> output, indices = pool(input) |
|
>>> # This call will not work without specifying output_size |
|
>>> unpool(output, indices, output_size=input.size()) |
|
tensor([[[[ 0., 0., 0., 0., 0.], |
|
[ 0., 7., 0., 9., 0.], |
|
[ 0., 0., 0., 0., 0.], |
|
[ 0., 17., 0., 19., 0.]]]]) |
|
|
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_2_t |
|
stride: _size_2_t |
|
padding: _size_2_t |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_2_t, stride: Optional[_size_2_t] = None, padding: _size_2_t = 0) -> None: |
|
super(MaxUnpool2d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = _pair(kernel_size) |
|
self.stride = _pair(stride if (stride is not None) else kernel_size) |
|
self.padding = _pair(padding) |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor, indices: Tensor, output_size: Optional[List[int]] = None) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.max_unpool2d(input, indices, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
class MaxUnpool3d(_MaxUnpoolNd): |
|
r"""Computes a partial inverse of :class:`MaxPool3d`. |
|
|
|
:class:`MaxPool3d` is not fully invertible, since the non-maximal values are lost. |
|
:class:`MaxUnpool3d` takes in as input the output of :class:`MaxPool3d` |
|
including the indices of the maximal values and computes a partial inverse |
|
in which all non-maximal values are set to zero. |
|
|
|
.. note:: :class:`MaxPool3d` can map several input sizes to the same output |
|
sizes. Hence, the inversion process can get ambiguous. |
|
To accommodate this, you can provide the needed output size |
|
as an additional argument :attr:`output_size` in the forward call. |
|
See the Inputs section below. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size (int or tuple): Size of the max pooling window. |
|
stride (int or tuple): Stride of the max pooling window. |
|
It is set to :attr:`kernel_size` by default. |
|
padding (int or tuple): Padding that was added to the input |
|
|
|
Inputs: |
|
- `input`: the input Tensor to invert |
|
- `indices`: the indices given out by :class:`~torch.nn.MaxPool3d` |
|
- `output_size` (optional): the targeted output size |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
D_{out} = (D_{in} - 1) \times \text{stride[0]} - 2 \times \text{padding[0]} + \text{kernel\_size[0]} |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = (H_{in} - 1) \times \text{stride[1]} - 2 \times \text{padding[1]} + \text{kernel\_size[1]} |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = (W_{in} - 1) \times \text{stride[2]} - 2 \times \text{padding[2]} + \text{kernel\_size[2]} |
|
|
|
or as given by :attr:`output_size` in the call operator |
|
|
|
Example:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool of square window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> pool = nn.MaxPool3d(3, stride=2, return_indices=True) |
|
>>> unpool = nn.MaxUnpool3d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> output, indices = pool(torch.randn(20, 16, 51, 33, 15)) |
|
>>> unpooled_output = unpool(output, indices) |
|
>>> unpooled_output.size() |
|
torch.Size([20, 16, 51, 33, 15]) |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_3_t |
|
stride: _size_3_t |
|
padding: _size_3_t |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_3_t, stride: Optional[_size_3_t] = None, padding: _size_3_t = 0) -> None: |
|
super(MaxUnpool3d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = _triple(kernel_size) |
|
self.stride = _triple(stride if (stride is not None) else kernel_size) |
|
self.padding = _triple(padding) |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor, indices: Tensor, output_size: Optional[List[int]] = None) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.max_unpool3d(input, indices, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
class _AvgPoolNd(Module): |
|
__constants__ = ['kernel_size', 'stride', 'padding', 'ceil_mode', 'count_include_pad'] |
|
|
|
def extra_repr(self) -> str: |
|
return 'kernel_size={}, stride={}, padding={}'.format( |
|
self.kernel_size, self.stride, self.padding |
|
) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AvgPool1d(_AvgPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 1D average pooling over an input signal composed of several |
|
input planes. |
|
|
|
In the simplest case, the output value of the layer with input size :math:`(N, C, L)`, |
|
output :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` and :attr:`kernel_size` :math:`k` |
|
can be precisely described as: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
|
|
\text{out}(N_i, C_j, l) = \frac{1}{k} \sum_{m=0}^{k-1} |
|
\text{input}(N_i, C_j, \text{stride} \times l + m) |
|
|
|
If :attr:`padding` is non-zero, then the input is implicitly zero-padded on both sides |
|
for :attr:`padding` number of points. |
|
|
|
Note: |
|
When ceil_mode=True, sliding windows are allowed to go off-bounds if they start within the left padding |
|
or the input. Sliding windows that would start in the right padded region are ignored. |
|
|
|
The parameters :attr:`kernel_size`, :attr:`stride`, :attr:`padding` can each be |
|
an ``int`` or a one-element tuple. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window |
|
stride: the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
padding: implicit zero padding to be added on both sides |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
count_include_pad: when True, will include the zero-padding in the averaging calculation |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, L_{in})` or :math:`(C, L_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` or :math:`(C, L_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
L_{out} = \left\lfloor \frac{L_{in} + |
|
2 \times \text{padding} - \text{kernel\_size}}{\text{stride}} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool with window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.AvgPool1d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> m(torch.tensor([[[1.,2,3,4,5,6,7]]])) |
|
tensor([[[2., 4., 6.]]]) |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_1_t |
|
stride: _size_1_t |
|
padding: _size_1_t |
|
ceil_mode: bool |
|
count_include_pad: bool |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_1_t, stride: _size_1_t = None, padding: _size_1_t = 0, ceil_mode: bool = False, |
|
count_include_pad: bool = True) -> None: |
|
super(AvgPool1d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = _single(kernel_size) |
|
self.stride = _single(stride if stride is not None else kernel_size) |
|
self.padding = _single(padding) |
|
self.ceil_mode = ceil_mode |
|
self.count_include_pad = count_include_pad |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.avg_pool1d( |
|
input, self.kernel_size, self.stride, self.padding, self.ceil_mode, |
|
self.count_include_pad) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AvgPool2d(_AvgPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 2D average pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
In the simplest case, the output value of the layer with input size :math:`(N, C, H, W)`, |
|
output :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` and :attr:`kernel_size` :math:`(kH, kW)` |
|
can be precisely described as: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
|
|
out(N_i, C_j, h, w) = \frac{1}{kH * kW} \sum_{m=0}^{kH-1} \sum_{n=0}^{kW-1} |
|
input(N_i, C_j, stride[0] \times h + m, stride[1] \times w + n) |
|
|
|
If :attr:`padding` is non-zero, then the input is implicitly zero-padded on both sides |
|
for :attr:`padding` number of points. |
|
|
|
Note: |
|
When ceil_mode=True, sliding windows are allowed to go off-bounds if they start within the left padding |
|
or the input. Sliding windows that would start in the right padded region are ignored. |
|
|
|
The parameters :attr:`kernel_size`, :attr:`stride`, :attr:`padding` can either be: |
|
|
|
- a single ``int`` -- in which case the same value is used for the height and width dimension |
|
- a ``tuple`` of two ints -- in which case, the first `int` is used for the height dimension, |
|
and the second `int` for the width dimension |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window |
|
stride: the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
padding: implicit zero padding to be added on both sides |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
count_include_pad: when True, will include the zero-padding in the averaging calculation |
|
divisor_override: if specified, it will be used as divisor, otherwise size of the pooling region will be used. |
|
|
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{H_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[0] - |
|
\text{kernel\_size}[0]}{\text{stride}[0]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{W_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[1] - |
|
\text{kernel\_size}[1]}{\text{stride}[1]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool of square window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.AvgPool2d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> # pool of non-square window |
|
>>> m = nn.AvgPool2d((3, 2), stride=(2, 1)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50, 32) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
""" |
|
__constants__ = ['kernel_size', 'stride', 'padding', 'ceil_mode', 'count_include_pad', 'divisor_override'] |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_2_t |
|
stride: _size_2_t |
|
padding: _size_2_t |
|
ceil_mode: bool |
|
count_include_pad: bool |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_2_t, stride: Optional[_size_2_t] = None, padding: _size_2_t = 0, |
|
ceil_mode: bool = False, count_include_pad: bool = True, divisor_override: Optional[int] = None) -> None: |
|
super(AvgPool2d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = kernel_size |
|
self.stride = stride if (stride is not None) else kernel_size |
|
self.padding = padding |
|
self.ceil_mode = ceil_mode |
|
self.count_include_pad = count_include_pad |
|
self.divisor_override = divisor_override |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.avg_pool2d(input, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, self.ceil_mode, self.count_include_pad, self.divisor_override) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AvgPool3d(_AvgPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 3D average pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
In the simplest case, the output value of the layer with input size :math:`(N, C, D, H, W)`, |
|
output :math:`(N, C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` and :attr:`kernel_size` :math:`(kD, kH, kW)` |
|
can be precisely described as: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
\begin{aligned} |
|
\text{out}(N_i, C_j, d, h, w) ={} & \sum_{k=0}^{kD-1} \sum_{m=0}^{kH-1} \sum_{n=0}^{kW-1} \\ |
|
& \frac{\text{input}(N_i, C_j, \text{stride}[0] \times d + k, |
|
\text{stride}[1] \times h + m, \text{stride}[2] \times w + n)} |
|
{kD \times kH \times kW} |
|
\end{aligned} |
|
|
|
If :attr:`padding` is non-zero, then the input is implicitly zero-padded on all three sides |
|
for :attr:`padding` number of points. |
|
|
|
Note: |
|
When ceil_mode=True, sliding windows are allowed to go off-bounds if they start within the left padding |
|
or the input. Sliding windows that would start in the right padded region are ignored. |
|
|
|
The parameters :attr:`kernel_size`, :attr:`stride` can either be: |
|
|
|
- a single ``int`` -- in which case the same value is used for the depth, height and width dimension |
|
- a ``tuple`` of three ints -- in which case, the first `int` is used for the depth dimension, |
|
the second `int` for the height dimension and the third `int` for the width dimension |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window |
|
stride: the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
padding: implicit zero padding to be added on all three sides |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
count_include_pad: when True, will include the zero-padding in the averaging calculation |
|
divisor_override: if specified, it will be used as divisor, otherwise :attr:`kernel_size` will be used |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` or |
|
:math:`(C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
D_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{D_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[0] - |
|
\text{kernel\_size}[0]}{\text{stride}[0]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{H_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[1] - |
|
\text{kernel\_size}[1]}{\text{stride}[1]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{W_{in} + 2 \times \text{padding}[2] - |
|
\text{kernel\_size}[2]}{\text{stride}[2]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # pool of square window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.AvgPool3d(3, stride=2) |
|
>>> # pool of non-square window |
|
>>> m = nn.AvgPool3d((3, 2, 2), stride=(2, 1, 2)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50,44, 31) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
""" |
|
__constants__ = ['kernel_size', 'stride', 'padding', 'ceil_mode', 'count_include_pad', 'divisor_override'] |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_3_t |
|
stride: _size_3_t |
|
padding: _size_3_t |
|
ceil_mode: bool |
|
count_include_pad: bool |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_3_t, stride: Optional[_size_3_t] = None, padding: _size_3_t = 0, |
|
ceil_mode: bool = False, count_include_pad: bool = True, divisor_override: Optional[int] = None) -> None: |
|
super(AvgPool3d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = kernel_size |
|
self.stride = stride if (stride is not None) else kernel_size |
|
self.padding = padding |
|
self.ceil_mode = ceil_mode |
|
self.count_include_pad = count_include_pad |
|
self.divisor_override = divisor_override |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.avg_pool3d(input, self.kernel_size, self.stride, |
|
self.padding, self.ceil_mode, self.count_include_pad, self.divisor_override) |
|
|
|
def __setstate__(self, d): |
|
super(AvgPool3d, self).__setstate__(d) |
|
self.__dict__.setdefault('padding', 0) |
|
self.__dict__.setdefault('ceil_mode', False) |
|
self.__dict__.setdefault('count_include_pad', True) |
|
|
|
|
|
class FractionalMaxPool2d(Module): |
|
r"""Applies a 2D fractional max pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
Fractional MaxPooling is described in detail in the paper `Fractional MaxPooling`_ by Ben Graham |
|
|
|
The max-pooling operation is applied in :math:`kH \times kW` regions by a stochastic |
|
step size determined by the target output size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window to take a max over. |
|
Can be a single number k (for a square kernel of k x k) or a tuple `(kh, kw)` |
|
output_size: the target output size of the image of the form `oH x oW`. |
|
Can be a tuple `(oH, oW)` or a single number oH for a square image `oH x oH` |
|
output_ratio: If one wants to have an output size as a ratio of the input size, this option can be given. |
|
This has to be a number or tuple in the range (0, 1) |
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful to pass to :meth:`nn.MaxUnpool2d`. Default: ``False`` |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
:math:`(H_{out}, W_{out})=\text{output\_size}` or |
|
:math:`(H_{out}, W_{out})=\text{output\_ratio} \times (H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # pool of square window of size=3, and target output size 13x12 |
|
>>> m = nn.FractionalMaxPool2d(3, output_size=(13, 12)) |
|
>>> # pool of square window and target output size being half of input image size |
|
>>> m = nn.FractionalMaxPool2d(3, output_ratio=(0.5, 0.5)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50, 32) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
.. _Fractional MaxPooling: |
|
https://arxiv.org/abs/1412.6071 |
|
""" |
|
__constants__ = ['kernel_size', 'return_indices', 'output_size', |
|
'output_ratio'] |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_2_t |
|
return_indices: bool |
|
output_size: _size_2_t |
|
output_ratio: _ratio_2_t |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_2_t, output_size: Optional[_size_2_t] = None, |
|
output_ratio: Optional[_ratio_2_t] = None, |
|
return_indices: bool = False, _random_samples=None) -> None: |
|
super(FractionalMaxPool2d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = _pair(kernel_size) |
|
self.return_indices = return_indices |
|
self.register_buffer('_random_samples', _random_samples) |
|
self.output_size = _pair(output_size) if output_size is not None else None |
|
self.output_ratio = _pair(output_ratio) if output_ratio is not None else None |
|
if output_size is None and output_ratio is None: |
|
raise ValueError("FractionalMaxPool2d requires specifying either " |
|
"an output size, or a pooling ratio") |
|
if output_size is not None and output_ratio is not None: |
|
raise ValueError("only one of output_size and output_ratio may be specified") |
|
if self.output_ratio is not None: |
|
if not (0 < self.output_ratio[0] < 1 and 0 < self.output_ratio[1] < 1): |
|
raise ValueError("output_ratio must be between 0 and 1 (got {})" |
|
.format(output_ratio)) |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.fractional_max_pool2d( |
|
input, self.kernel_size, self.output_size, self.output_ratio, |
|
self.return_indices, |
|
_random_samples=self._random_samples) |
|
|
|
|
|
class FractionalMaxPool3d(Module): |
|
r"""Applies a 3D fractional max pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
Fractional MaxPooling is described in detail in the paper `Fractional MaxPooling`_ by Ben Graham |
|
|
|
The max-pooling operation is applied in :math:`kT \times kH \times kW` regions by a stochastic |
|
step size determined by the target output size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window to take a max over. |
|
Can be a single number k (for a square kernel of k x k x k) or a tuple `(kt x kh x kw)` |
|
output_size: the target output size of the image of the form `oT x oH x oW`. |
|
Can be a tuple `(oT, oH, oW)` or a single number oH for a square image `oH x oH x oH` |
|
output_ratio: If one wants to have an output size as a ratio of the input size, this option can be given. |
|
This has to be a number or tuple in the range (0, 1) |
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful to pass to :meth:`nn.MaxUnpool3d`. Default: ``False`` |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, T_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, T_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, T_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, T_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
:math:`(T_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})=\text{output\_size}` or |
|
:math:`(T_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})=\text{output\_ratio} \times (T_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # pool of cubic window of size=3, and target output size 13x12x11 |
|
>>> m = nn.FractionalMaxPool3d(3, output_size=(13, 12, 11)) |
|
>>> # pool of cubic window and target output size being half of input size |
|
>>> m = nn.FractionalMaxPool3d(3, output_ratio=(0.5, 0.5, 0.5)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50, 32, 16) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
.. _Fractional MaxPooling: |
|
https://arxiv.org/abs/1412.6071 |
|
""" |
|
__constants__ = ['kernel_size', 'return_indices', 'output_size', |
|
'output_ratio'] |
|
kernel_size: _size_3_t |
|
return_indices: bool |
|
output_size: _size_3_t |
|
output_ratio: _ratio_3_t |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, kernel_size: _size_3_t, output_size: Optional[_size_3_t] = None, |
|
output_ratio: Optional[_ratio_3_t] = None, |
|
return_indices: bool = False, _random_samples=None) -> None: |
|
super(FractionalMaxPool3d, self).__init__() |
|
self.kernel_size = _triple(kernel_size) |
|
self.return_indices = return_indices |
|
self.register_buffer('_random_samples', _random_samples) |
|
self.output_size = _triple(output_size) if output_size is not None else None |
|
self.output_ratio = _triple(output_ratio) if output_ratio is not None else None |
|
if output_size is None and output_ratio is None: |
|
raise ValueError("FractionalMaxPool3d requires specifying either " |
|
"an output size, or a pooling ratio") |
|
if output_size is not None and output_ratio is not None: |
|
raise ValueError("only one of output_size and output_ratio may be specified") |
|
if self.output_ratio is not None: |
|
if not (0 < self.output_ratio[0] < 1 and 0 < self.output_ratio[1] < 1 and 0 < self.output_ratio[2] < 1): |
|
raise ValueError("output_ratio must be between 0 and 1 (got {})" |
|
.format(output_ratio)) |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.fractional_max_pool3d( |
|
input, self.kernel_size, self.output_size, self.output_ratio, |
|
self.return_indices, |
|
_random_samples=self._random_samples) |
|
|
|
|
|
class _LPPoolNd(Module): |
|
__constants__ = ['norm_type', 'kernel_size', 'stride', 'ceil_mode'] |
|
|
|
norm_type: float |
|
ceil_mode: bool |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, norm_type: float, kernel_size: _size_any_t, stride: Optional[_size_any_t] = None, |
|
ceil_mode: bool = False) -> None: |
|
super(_LPPoolNd, self).__init__() |
|
self.norm_type = norm_type |
|
self.kernel_size = kernel_size |
|
self.stride = stride |
|
self.ceil_mode = ceil_mode |
|
|
|
def extra_repr(self) -> str: |
|
return 'norm_type={norm_type}, kernel_size={kernel_size}, stride={stride}, ' \ |
|
'ceil_mode={ceil_mode}'.format(**self.__dict__) |
|
|
|
|
|
class LPPool1d(_LPPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 1D power-average pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
On each window, the function computed is: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
f(X) = \sqrt[p]{\sum_{x \in X} x^{p}} |
|
|
|
- At p = :math:`\infty`, one gets Max Pooling |
|
- At p = 1, one gets Sum Pooling (which is proportional to Average Pooling) |
|
|
|
.. note:: If the sum to the power of `p` is zero, the gradient of this function is |
|
not defined. This implementation will set the gradient to zero in this case. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: a single int, the size of the window |
|
stride: a single int, the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, L_{in})` or :math:`(C, L_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` or :math:`(C, L_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
L_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{L_{in} - \text{kernel\_size}}{\text{stride}} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
>>> # power-2 pool of window of length 3, with stride 2. |
|
>>> m = nn.LPPool1d(2, 3, stride=2) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_1_t |
|
stride: _size_1_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.lp_pool1d(input, float(self.norm_type), self.kernel_size, |
|
self.stride, self.ceil_mode) |
|
|
|
|
|
class LPPool2d(_LPPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 2D power-average pooling over an input signal composed of several input |
|
planes. |
|
|
|
On each window, the function computed is: |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
f(X) = \sqrt[p]{\sum_{x \in X} x^{p}} |
|
|
|
- At p = :math:`\infty`, one gets Max Pooling |
|
- At p = 1, one gets Sum Pooling (which is proportional to average pooling) |
|
|
|
The parameters :attr:`kernel_size`, :attr:`stride` can either be: |
|
|
|
- a single ``int`` -- in which case the same value is used for the height and width dimension |
|
- a ``tuple`` of two ints -- in which case, the first `int` is used for the height dimension, |
|
and the second `int` for the width dimension |
|
|
|
.. note:: If the sum to the power of `p` is zero, the gradient of this function is |
|
not defined. This implementation will set the gradient to zero in this case. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
kernel_size: the size of the window |
|
stride: the stride of the window. Default value is :attr:`kernel_size` |
|
ceil_mode: when True, will use `ceil` instead of `floor` to compute the output shape |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
H_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{H_{in} - \text{kernel\_size}[0]}{\text{stride}[0]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
.. math:: |
|
W_{out} = \left\lfloor\frac{W_{in} - \text{kernel\_size}[1]}{\text{stride}[1]} + 1\right\rfloor |
|
|
|
Examples:: |
|
|
|
>>> # power-2 pool of square window of size=3, stride=2 |
|
>>> m = nn.LPPool2d(2, 3, stride=2) |
|
>>> # pool of non-square window of power 1.2 |
|
>>> m = nn.LPPool2d(1.2, (3, 2), stride=(2, 1)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(20, 16, 50, 32) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
kernel_size: _size_2_t |
|
stride: _size_2_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.lp_pool2d(input, float(self.norm_type), self.kernel_size, |
|
self.stride, self.ceil_mode) |
|
|
|
|
|
class _AdaptiveMaxPoolNd(Module): |
|
__constants__ = ['output_size', 'return_indices'] |
|
return_indices: bool |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, output_size: _size_any_opt_t, return_indices: bool = False) -> None: |
|
super(_AdaptiveMaxPoolNd, self).__init__() |
|
self.output_size = output_size |
|
self.return_indices = return_indices |
|
|
|
def extra_repr(self) -> str: |
|
return 'output_size={}'.format(self.output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
class AdaptiveMaxPool1d(_AdaptiveMaxPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 1D adaptive max pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
The output size is :math:`L_{out}`, for any input size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
output_size: the target output size :math:`L_{out}`. |
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful to pass to nn.MaxUnpool1d. Default: ``False`` |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, L_{in})` or :math:`(C, L_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` or :math:`(C, L_{out})`, where |
|
:math:`L_{out}=\text{output\_size}`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # target output size of 5 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool1d(5) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 8) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
output_size: _size_1_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.adaptive_max_pool1d(input, self.output_size, self.return_indices) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AdaptiveMaxPool2d(_AdaptiveMaxPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 2D adaptive max pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
The output is of size :math:`H_{out} \times W_{out}`, for any input size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
output_size: the target output size of the image of the form :math:`H_{out} \times W_{out}`. |
|
Can be a tuple :math:`(H_{out}, W_{out})` or a single :math:`H_{out}` for a |
|
square image :math:`H_{out} \times H_{out}`. :math:`H_{out}` and :math:`W_{out}` |
|
can be either a ``int``, or ``None`` which means the size will be the same as that |
|
of the input. |
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful to pass to nn.MaxUnpool2d. Default: ``False`` |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, H_{out}, W_{out})`, where |
|
:math:`(H_{out}, W_{out})=\text{output\_size}`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # target output size of 5x7 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool2d((5,7)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 8, 9) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 7x7 (square) |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool2d(7) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 10x7 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool2d((None, 7)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
output_size: _size_2_opt_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.adaptive_max_pool2d(input, self.output_size, self.return_indices) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AdaptiveMaxPool3d(_AdaptiveMaxPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 3D adaptive max pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
The output is of size :math:`D_{out} \times H_{out} \times W_{out}`, for any input size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
output_size: the target output size of the image of the form :math:`D_{out} \times H_{out} \times W_{out}`. |
|
Can be a tuple :math:`(D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` or a single |
|
:math:`D_{out}` for a cube :math:`D_{out} \times D_{out} \times D_{out}`. |
|
:math:`D_{out}`, :math:`H_{out}` and :math:`W_{out}` can be either a |
|
``int``, or ``None`` which means the size will be the same as that of the input. |
|
|
|
return_indices: if ``True``, will return the indices along with the outputs. |
|
Useful to pass to nn.MaxUnpool3d. Default: ``False`` |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})` or :math:`(C, D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})`, |
|
where :math:`(D_{out}, H_{out}, W_{out})=\text{output\_size}`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # target output size of 5x7x9 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool3d((5,7,9)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 8, 9, 10) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 7x7x7 (cube) |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool3d(7) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9, 8) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 7x9x8 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveMaxPool3d((7, None, None)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9, 8) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
output_size: _size_3_opt_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor): |
|
return F.adaptive_max_pool3d(input, self.output_size, self.return_indices) |
|
|
|
|
|
class _AdaptiveAvgPoolNd(Module): |
|
__constants__ = ['output_size'] |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, output_size: _size_any_opt_t) -> None: |
|
super(_AdaptiveAvgPoolNd, self).__init__() |
|
self.output_size = output_size |
|
|
|
def extra_repr(self) -> str: |
|
return 'output_size={}'.format(self.output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AdaptiveAvgPool1d(_AdaptiveAvgPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 1D adaptive average pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
The output size is :math:`L_{out}`, for any input size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
output_size: the target output size :math:`L_{out}`. |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, L_{in})` or :math:`(C, L_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, L_{out})` or :math:`(C, L_{out})`, where |
|
:math:`L_{out}=\text{output\_size}`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # target output size of 5 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool1d(5) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 8) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
output_size: _size_1_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.adaptive_avg_pool1d(input, self.output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AdaptiveAvgPool2d(_AdaptiveAvgPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 2D adaptive average pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
The output is of size H x W, for any input size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
output_size: the target output size of the image of the form H x W. |
|
Can be a tuple (H, W) or a single H for a square image H x H. |
|
H and W can be either a ``int``, or ``None`` which means the size will |
|
be the same as that of the input. |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, S_{0}, S_{1})` or :math:`(C, S_{0}, S_{1})`, where |
|
:math:`S=\text{output\_size}`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # target output size of 5x7 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool2d((5,7)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 8, 9) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 7x7 (square) |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool2d(7) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 10x7 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool2d((None, 7)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
output_size: _size_2_opt_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.adaptive_avg_pool2d(input, self.output_size) |
|
|
|
|
|
class AdaptiveAvgPool3d(_AdaptiveAvgPoolNd): |
|
r"""Applies a 3D adaptive average pooling over an input signal composed of several input planes. |
|
|
|
The output is of size D x H x W, for any input size. |
|
The number of output features is equal to the number of input planes. |
|
|
|
Args: |
|
output_size: the target output size of the form D x H x W. |
|
Can be a tuple (D, H, W) or a single number D for a cube D x D x D. |
|
D, H and W can be either a ``int``, or ``None`` which means the size will |
|
be the same as that of the input. |
|
|
|
Shape: |
|
- Input: :math:`(N, C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})` or :math:`(C, D_{in}, H_{in}, W_{in})`. |
|
- Output: :math:`(N, C, S_{0}, S_{1}, S_{2})` or :math:`(C, S_{0}, S_{1}, S_{2})`, |
|
where :math:`S=\text{output\_size}`. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
>>> # target output size of 5x7x9 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool3d((5,7,9)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 8, 9, 10) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 7x7x7 (cube) |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool3d(7) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9, 8) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
>>> # target output size of 7x9x8 |
|
>>> m = nn.AdaptiveAvgPool3d((7, None, None)) |
|
>>> input = torch.randn(1, 64, 10, 9, 8) |
|
>>> output = m(input) |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
output_size: _size_3_opt_t |
|
|
|
def forward(self, input: Tensor) -> Tensor: |
|
return F.adaptive_avg_pool3d(input, self.output_size) |
|
|