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function [tpr,tnr,info] = vl_roc(labels, scores, varargin)
%VL_ROC ROC curve.
% [TPR,TNR] = VL_ROC(LABELS, SCORES) computes the Receiver Operating
% Characteristic (ROC) curve. LABELS are the ground truth labels,
% greather than zero for a positive sample and smaller than zero for
% a negative one. SCORES are the scores of the samples obtained from
% a classifier, where lager scores should correspond to positive
% labels.
%
% Samples are ranked by decreasing scores, starting from rank 1.
% TPR(K) and TNR(K) are the true positive and true negative rates
% when samples of rank smaller or equal to K-1 are predicted to be
% positive. So for example TPR(3) is the true positive rate when the
% two samples with largest score are predicted to be
% positive. Similarly, TPR(1) is the true positive rate when no
% samples are predicted to be positive, i.e. the constant 0.
%
% Set the zero the lables of samples that should be ignored in the
% evaluation. Set to -INF the scores of samples which are not
% retrieved. If there are samples with -INF score, then the ROC curve
% may have maximum TPR and TNR smaller than 1.
%
% [TPR,TNR,INFO] = VL_ROC(...) returns an additional structure INFO
% with the following fields:
%
% info.auc:: Area under the ROC curve (AUC).
% The ROC curve has a `staircase shape' because for each sample
% only TP or TN changes, but not both at the same time. Therefore
% there is no approximation involved in the computation of the
% area.
%
% info.eer:: Equal error rate (EER).
% The equal error rate is the value of FPR (or FNR) when the ROC
% curves intersects the line connecting (0,0) to (1,1).
%
% VL_ROC(...) with no output arguments plots the ROC curve in the
% current axis.
%
% VL_ROC() acccepts the following options:
%
% Plot:: []
% Setting this option turns on plotting unconditionally. The
% following plot variants are supported:
%
% tntp:: Plot TPR against TNR (standard ROC plot).
% tptn:: Plot TNR against TPR (recall on the horizontal axis).
% fptp:: Plot TPR against FPR.
% fpfn:: Plot FNR against FPR (similar to DET curve).
%
% NumPositives:: []
% NumNegatives:: []
% If set to a number, pretend that LABELS contains this may
% positive/negative labels. NUMPOSITIVES/NUMNEGATIVES cannot be
% smaller than the actual number of positive/negative entrires in
% LABELS. The additional positive/negative labels are appended to
% the end of the sequence, as if they had -INF scores (not
% retrieved). This is useful to evaluate large retrieval systems in
% which one stores ony a handful of top results for efficiency
% reasons.
%
% About the ROC curve::
% Consider a classifier that predicts as positive all samples whose
% score is not smaller than a threshold S. The ROC curve represents
% the performance of such classifier as the threshold S is
% changed. Formally, define
%
% P = overall num. of positive samples,
% N = overall num. of negative samples,
%
% and for each threshold S
%
% TP(S) = num. of samples that are correctly classified as positive,
% TN(S) = num. of samples that are correctly classified as negative,
% FP(S) = num. of samples that are incorrectly classified as positive,
% FN(S) = num. of samples that are incorrectly classified as negative.
%
% Consider also the rates:
%
% TPR = TP(S) / P, FNR = FN(S) / P,
% TNR = TN(S) / N, FPR = FP(S) / N,
%
% and notice that by definition
%
% P = TP(S) + FN(S) , N = TN(S) + FP(S),
% 1 = TPR(S) + FNR(S), 1 = TNR(S) + FPR(S).
%
% The ROC curve is the parametric curve (TPR(S), TNR(S)) obtained
% as the classifier threshold S is varied in the reals. The TPR is
% also known as recall (see VL_PR()).
%
% The ROC curve is contained in the square with vertices (0,0) The
% (average) ROC curve of a random classifier is a line which
% connects (1,0) and (0,1).
%
% The ROC curve is independent of the prior probability of the
% labels (i.e. of P/(P+N) and N/(P+N)).
%
% REFERENCES:
% [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receiver_operating_characteristic
%
% See also: VL_PR(), VL_DET(), VL_HELP().
% Copyright (C) 2007-12 Andrea Vedaldi and Brian Fulkerson.
% All rights reserved.
%
% This file is part of the VLFeat library and is made available under
% the terms of the BSD license (see the COPYING file).
[tp, fp, p, n, perm, varargin] = vl_tpfp(labels, scores, varargin{:}) ;
opts.plot = [] ;
opts.stable = false ;
opts = vl_argparse(opts,varargin) ;
% compute the rates
small = 1e-10 ;
tpr = tp / max(p, small) ;
fpr = fp / max(n, small) ;
fnr = 1 - tpr ;
tnr = 1 - fpr ;
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
% Additional info
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
if nargout > 2 || nargout == 0
% Area under the curve. Since the curve is a staircase (in the
% sense that for each sample either tn is decremented by one
% or tp is incremented by one but the other remains fixed),
% the integral is particularly simple and exact.
info.auc = sum(tnr .* diff([0 tpr])) ;
% Equal error rate. One must find the index S for which there is a
% crossing between TNR(S) and TPR(s). If such a crossing exists,
% there are two cases:
%
% o tnr o
% / \
% 1-eer = tnr o-x-o 1-eer = tpr o-x-o
% / \
% tpr o o
%
% Moreover, if the maximum TPR is smaller than 1, then it is
% possible that neither of the two cases realizes (then EER=NaN).
s = max(find(tnr > tpr)) ;
if s == length(tpr)
info.eer = NaN ;
else
if tpr(s) == tpr(s+1)
info.eer = 1 - tpr(s) ;
else
info.eer = 1 - tnr(s) ;
end
end
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
% Plot
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
if ~isempty(opts.plot) || nargout == 0
if isempty(opts.plot), opts.plot = 'fptp' ; end
cla ; hold on ;
switch lower(opts.plot)
case {'truenegatives', 'tn', 'tntp'}
hroc = plot(tnr, tpr, 'b', 'linewidth', 2) ;
hrand = spline([0 1], [1 0], 'r--', 'linewidth', 2) ;
spline([0 1], [0 1], 'k--', 'linewidth', 1) ;
plot(1-info.eer, 1-info.eer, 'k*', 'linewidth', 1) ;
xlabel('true negative rate') ;
ylabel('true positive rate (recall)') ;
loc = 'sw' ;
case {'falsepositives', 'fp', 'fptp'}
hroc = plot(fpr, tpr, 'b', 'linewidth', 2) ;
hrand = spline([0 1], [0 1], 'r--', 'linewidth', 2) ;
spline([1 0], [0 1], 'k--', 'linewidth', 1) ;
plot(info.eer, 1-info.eer, 'k*', 'linewidth', 1) ;
xlabel('false positive rate') ;
ylabel('true positive rate (recall)') ;
loc = 'se' ;
case {'tptn'}
hroc = plot(tpr, tnr, 'b', 'linewidth', 2) ;
hrand = spline([0 1], [1 0], 'r--', 'linewidth', 2) ;
spline([0 1], [0 1], 'k--', 'linewidth', 1) ;
plot(1-info.eer, 1-info.eer, 'k*', 'linewidth', 1) ;
xlabel('true positive rate (recall)') ;
ylabel('false positive rate') ;
loc = 'sw' ;
case {'fpfn'}
hroc = plot(fpr, fnr, 'b', 'linewidth', 2) ;
hrand = spline([0 1], [1 0], 'r--', 'linewidth', 2) ;
spline([0 1], [0 1], 'k--', 'linewidth', 1) ;
plot(info.eer, info.eer, 'k*', 'linewidth', 1) ;
xlabel('false positive (false alarm) rate') ;
ylabel('false negative (miss) rate') ;
loc = 'ne' ;
otherwise
error('''%s'' is not a valid PLOT type.', opts.plot);
end
grid on ;
xlim([0 1]) ;
ylim([0 1]) ;
axis square ;
title(sprintf('ROC (AUC: %.2f%%, EER: %.2f%%)', info.auc * 100, info.eer * 100), ...
'interpreter', 'none') ;
legend([hroc hrand], 'ROC', 'ROC rand.', 'location', loc) ;
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
% Stable output
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
if opts.stable
tpr(1) = [] ;
tnr(1) = [] ;
tpr_ = tpr ;
tnr_ = tnr ;
tpr = NaN(size(tpr)) ;
tnr = NaN(size(tnr)) ;
tpr(perm) = tpr_ ;
tnr(perm) = tnr_ ;
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
function h = spline(x,y,spec,varargin)
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
prop = vl_linespec2prop(spec) ;
h = line(x,y,prop{:},varargin{:}) ;