# Copyright 2020 The HuggingFace Datasets Authors and the current dataset script contributor. # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. """ISCO-08 Hierarchical Accuracy Measure.""" from typing import List, Set, Dict, Tuple import evaluate import datasets # import ham # import isco # TODO: Add BibTeX citation _CITATION = """ @article{scikit-learn, title={Scikit-learn: Machine Learning in {P}ython}, author={Pedregosa, F. and Varoquaux, G. and Gramfort, A. and Michel, V. and Thirion, B. and Grisel, O. and Blondel, M. and Prettenhofer, P. and Weiss, R. and Dubourg, V. and Vanderplas, J. and Passos, A. and Cournapeau, D. and Brucher, M. and Perrot, M. and Duchesnay, E.}, journal={Journal of Machine Learning Research}, volume={12}, pages={2825--2830}, year={2011} } """ _DESCRIPTION = """ The ISCO-08 Hierarchical Accuracy Measure is an implementation of the measure described in [Functional Annotation of Genes Using Hierarchical Text Categorization](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/44046343_Functional_Annotation_of_Genes_Using_Hierarchical_Text_Categorization) (Kiritchenko, Svetlana and Famili, Fazel. 2005) and adapted for the ISCO-08 classification scheme by the International Labour Organization. """ _KWARGS_DESCRIPTION = """ Calculates hierarchical precision, hierarchical recall and hierarchical F1 given a list of reference codes and predicted codes from the ISCO-08 taxonomy by the International Labour Organization. Args: - references (List[str]): List of ISCO-08 reference codes. Each reference code should be a single token, 4-digit ISCO-08 code string. - predictions (List[str]): List of machine predicted or human assigned ISCO-08 codes to score. Each prediction should be a single token, 4-digit ISCO-08 code string. Returns: - hierarchical_precision (`float` or `int`): Hierarchical precision score. Minimum possible value is 0. Maximum possible value is 1.0. A higher score means higher accuracy. - hierarchical_recall: Hierarchical recall score. Minimum possible value is 0. Maximum possible value is 1.0. A higher score means higher accuracy. - hierarchical_fmeasure: Hierarchical F1 score. Minimum possible value is 0. Maximum possible value is 1.0. A higher score means higher accuracy. Examples: Example 1 >>> ham = evaluate.load("danieldux/isco_hierarchical_accuracy") >>> results = ham.compute(reference=["1111", "1112", "1113", "1114"], predictions=["1111", "1113", "1120", "1211"]) >>> print(results) { 'accuracy': 0.25, 'hierarchical_precision': 0.7142857142857143, 'hierarchical_recall': 0.5, 'hierarchical_fmeasure': 0.588235294117647 } """ # TODO: Define external resources urls if needed ISCO_CSV_MIRROR_URL = ( "https://storage.googleapis.com/isco-public/tables/ISCO_structure.csv" ) ILO_ISCO_CSV_URL = ( "https://www.ilo.org/ilostat-files/ISCO/newdocs-08-2021/ISCO-08/ISCO-08%20EN.csv" ) @evaluate.utils.file_utils.add_start_docstrings(_DESCRIPTION, _KWARGS_DESCRIPTION) class ISCO_Hierarchical_Accuracy(evaluate.Metric): """The ISCO-08 Hierarchical Accuracy Measure""" def _info(self): # TODO: Specifies the evaluate.EvaluationModuleInfo object return evaluate.MetricInfo( # This is the description that will appear on the modules page. module_type="metric", description=_DESCRIPTION, citation=_CITATION, inputs_description=_KWARGS_DESCRIPTION, # This defines the format of each prediction and reference # features=datasets.Features( # { # "predictions": datasets.Value("string"), # "references": datasets.Value("string"), # } # ), features=datasets.Features( { "references": datasets.Sequence(datasets.Value("string")), "predictions": datasets.Sequence(datasets.Value("string")), } if self.config_name == "multilabel" else { "references": datasets.Value("string"), "predictions": datasets.Value("string"), } ), # TODO: Homepage of the module for documentation homepage="http://module.homepage", # TODO: Additional links to the codebase or references codebase_urls=["http://github.com/path/to/codebase/of/new_module"], reference_urls=["http://path.to.reference.url/new_module"], ) def create_hierarchy_dict(self, file: str) -> dict: """ Creates a dictionary where keys are nodes and values are sets of parent nodes representing the group level hierarchy of the ISCO-08 structure. The function assumes that the input CSV file has a column named 'unit' with the 4-digit ISCO-08 codes. A csv file with the ISCO-08 structure can be downloaded from the International Labour Organization (ILO) at [https://www.ilo.org/ilostat-files/ISCO/newdocs-08-2021/ISCO-08/ISCO-08 EN.csv](https://www.ilo.org/ilostat-files/ISCO/newdocs-08-2021/ISCO-08/ISCO-08%20EN.csv) Args: - file: A string representing the path to the CSV file containing the 4-digit ISCO-08 codes. It can be a local path or a web URL. Returns: - A dictionary where keys are ISCO-08 unit codes and values are sets of their parent codes. """ try: import requests import csv except ImportError as error: raise error isco_hierarchy = {} if file.startswith("http://") or file.startswith("https://"): response = requests.get(file) lines = response.text.splitlines() else: with open(file, newline="") as csvfile: lines = csvfile.readlines() reader = csv.DictReader(lines) for row in reader: unit_code = row["unit"].zfill(4) minor_code = unit_code[0:3] sub_major_code = unit_code[0:2] major_code = unit_code[0] isco_hierarchy[unit_code] = {minor_code, major_code, sub_major_code} return isco_hierarchy def find_ancestors(self, node: str, hierarchy: dict) -> set: """ Find the ancestors of a given node in a hierarchy. Args: node (str): The node for which to find ancestors. hierarchy (dict): A dictionary representing the hierarchy, where the keys are nodes and the values are their parents. Returns: set: A set of ancestors of the given node. """ ancestors = set() nodes_to_visit = [node] while nodes_to_visit: current_node = nodes_to_visit.pop() if current_node in hierarchy: parents = hierarchy[current_node] ancestors.update(parents) nodes_to_visit.extend(parents) return ancestors def extend_with_ancestors(self, classes: set, hierarchy: dict) -> set: """ Extend the given set of classes with their ancestors from the hierarchy. Args: classes (set): The set of classes to extend. hierarchy (dict): The hierarchy of classes. Returns: set: The extended set of classes including their ancestors. """ extended_classes = set(classes) for cls in classes: ancestors = self.find_ancestors(cls, hierarchy) extended_classes.update(ancestors) return extended_classes def calculate_hierarchical_precision_recall( self, reference_codes: List[str], predicted_codes: List[str], hierarchy: Dict[str, Set[str]], ) -> Tuple[float, float]: """ Calculates the hierarchical precision and recall given the reference codes, predicted codes, and hierarchy definition. Args: real_codes (List[str]): The list of reference codes. predicted_codes (List[str]): The list of predicted codes. hierarchy (Dict[str, Set[str]]): The hierarchy definition where keys are nodes and values are sets of parent nodes. Returns: Tuple[float, float]: A tuple containing the hierarchical precision and recall floating point values. """ # Extend the sets of real and predicted codes with their ancestors extended_real = set() for code in reference_codes: extended_real.add(code) extended_real.update(hierarchy.get(code, set())) extended_predicted = set() for code in predicted_codes: extended_predicted.add(code) extended_predicted.update(hierarchy.get(code, set())) # Calculate the intersection correct_predictions = extended_real.intersection(extended_predicted) # Calculate hierarchical precision and recall hP = ( len(correct_predictions) / len(extended_predicted) if extended_predicted else 0 ) hR = len(correct_predictions) / len(extended_real) if extended_real else 0 return hP, hR def hierarchical_f_measure(self, hP, hR, beta=1.0): """ Calculate the hierarchical F-measure. Parameters: hP (float): The hierarchical precision. hR (float): The hierarchical recall. beta (float, optional): The beta value for F-measure calculation. Default is 1.0. Returns: float: The hierarchical F-measure. """ if hP + hR == 0: return 0 return (beta**2 + 1) * hP * hR / (beta**2 * hP + hR) def _download_and_prepare(self, dl_manager): """Download external ISCO-08 csv file from the ILO website for creating the hierarchy dictionary.""" isco_csv = dl_manager.download_and_extract(ISCO_CSV_MIRROR_URL) print(f"ISCO CSV file downloaded") # self.isco_hierarchy = isco.create_hierarchy_dict(isco_csv) self.isco_hierarchy = self.create_hierarchy_dict(isco_csv) print("ISCO hierarchy dictionary created") print(self.isco_hierarchy) def _compute(self, predictions, references): """Returns the accuracy scores.""" # Convert the inputs to strings predictions = [str(p) for p in predictions] references = [str(r) for r in references] # Calculate accuracy accuracy = sum(i == j for i, j in zip(predictions, references)) / len( predictions ) print(f"Accuracy: {accuracy}") # Calculate hierarchical precision, recall and f-measure hierarchy = self.isco_hierarchy hP, hR = self.calculate_hierarchical_precision_recall( references, predictions, hierarchy ) hF = self.hierarchical_f_measure(hP, hR) print( f"Hierarchical Precision: {hP}, Hierarchical Recall: {hR}, Hierarchical F-measure: {hF}" ) return { "accuracy": accuracy, "hierarchical_precision": hP, "hierarchical_recall": hR, "hierarchical_fmeasure": hF, }