Adadelta
classkeras.optimizers.Adadelta(
learning_rate=0.001,
rho=0.95,
epsilon=1e-07,
weight_decay=None,
clipnorm=None,
clipvalue=None,
global_clipnorm=None,
use_ema=False,
ema_momentum=0.99,
ema_overwrite_frequency=None,
loss_scale_factor=None,
gradient_accumulation_steps=None,
name="adadelta",
**kwargs
)
Optimizer that implements the Adadelta algorithm.
Adadelta optimization is a stochastic gradient descent method that is based on adaptive learning rate per dimension to address two drawbacks:
Adadelta is a more robust extension of Adagrad that adapts learning rates based on a moving window of gradient updates, instead of accumulating all past gradients. This way, Adadelta continues learning even when many updates have been done. Compared to Adagrad, in the original version of Adadelta you don't have to set an initial learning rate. In this version, the initial learning rate can be set, as in most other Keras optimizers.
Arguments
keras.optimizers.schedules.LearningRateSchedule
instance, or
a callable that takes no arguments and returns the actual value to
use. The learning rate. Defaults to 0.001
. Note that Adadelta
tends to benefit from higher initial learning rate values compared
to other optimizers. To match the exact form in the original paper,
use 1.0.0.95
.False
.
If True
, exponential moving average
(EMA) is applied. EMA consists of computing an exponential moving
average of the weights of the model (as the weight values change
after each training batch), and periodically overwriting the
weights with their moving average.use_ema=True
.
This is the momentum to use when computing
the EMA of the model's weights:
new_average = ema_momentum * old_average + (1 - ema_momentum) *
current_variable_value
.use_ema=True
. Every ema_overwrite_frequency
steps of iterations,
we overwrite the model variable by its moving average.
If None, the optimizer
does not overwrite model variables in the middle of training,
and you need to explicitly overwrite the variables
at the end of training by calling
optimizer.finalize_variable_values()
(which updates the model
variables in-place). When using the built-in fit()
training loop,
this happens automatically after the last epoch,
and you don't need to do anything.None
. If a float, the scale factor will
be multiplied the loss before computing gradients, and the inverse
of the scale factor will be multiplied by the gradients before
updating variables. Useful for preventing underflow during
mixed precision training. Alternately,
keras.optimizers.LossScaleOptimizer
will
automatically set a loss scale factor.None
. If an int, model & optimizer
variables will not be updated at every step; instead they will be
updated every gradient_accumulation_steps
steps, using the average
value of the gradients since the last update. This is known as
"gradient accumulation". This can be useful
when your batch size is very small, in order to reduce gradient
noise at each update step. EMA frequency will look at "accumulated"
iterations value (optimizer steps // gradient_accumulation_steps).
Learning rate schedules will look at "real" iterations value
(optimizer steps).Reference