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function [recall, precision, info] = vl_pr(labels, scores, varargin)
%VL_PR Precision-recall curve.
% [RECALL, PRECISION] = VL_PR(LABELS, SCORES) computes the
% precision-recall (PR) 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
% samples.
%
% Samples are ranked by decreasing scores, starting from rank 1.
% PRECISION(K) and RECALL(K) are the precison and recall when
% samples of rank smaller or equal to K-1 are predicted to be
% positive and the remaining to be negative. So for example
% PRECISION(3) is the percentage of positive samples among the two
% samples with largest score. PRECISION(1) is the precision when no
% samples are predicted to be positive and is conventionally set to
% the value 1.
%
% Set to 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 PR curve
% may have maximum recall smaller than 1, unless the INCLUDEINF
% option is used (see below). The options NUMNEGATIVES and
% NUMPOSITIVES can be used to add additional surrogate samples with
% -INF score (see below).
%
% [RECALL, PRECISION, INFO] = VL_PR(...) returns an additional
% structure INFO with the following fields:
%
% info.auc::
% The area under the precision-recall curve. If the INTERPOLATE
% option is set to FALSE, then trapezoidal interpolation is used
% to integrate the PR curve. If the INTERPOLATE option is set to
% TRUE, then the curve is piecewise constant and no other
% approximation is introduced in the calculation of the area. In
% the latter case, INFO.AUC is the same as INFO.AP.
%
% info.ap::
% Average precision as defined by TREC. This is the average of the
% precision observed each time a new positive sample is
% recalled. In this calculation, any sample with -INF score
% (unless INCLUDEINF is used) and any additional positive induced
% by NUMPOSITIVES has precision equal to zero. If the INTERPOLATE
% option is set to true, the AP is computed from the interpolated
% precision and the result is the same as INFO.AUC. Note that AP
% as defined by TREC normally does not use interpolation [1].
%
% info.ap_interp_11::
% 11-points interpolated average precision as defined by TREC.
% This is the average of the maximum precision for recall levels
% greather than 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, ..., 1.0. This measure was used in
% the PASCAL VOC challenge up to the 2008 edition.
%
% info.auc_pa08::
% Deprecated. It is the same of INFO.AP_INTERP_11.
%
% VL_PR(...) with no output arguments plots the PR curve in the
% current axis.
%
% VL_PR() accepts the following options:
%
% Interpolate:: false
% If set to true, use interpolated precision. The interpolated
% precision is defined as the maximum precision for a given recall
% level and onwards. Here it is implemented as the culumative
% maximum from low to high scores of the precision.
%
% 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
% for which one stores ony a handful of top results for efficiency
% reasons.
%
% IncludeInf:: false
% If set to true, data with -INF score SCORES is included in the
% evaluation and the maximum recall is 1 even if -INF scores are
% present. This option does not include any additional positive or
% negative data introduced by specifying NUMPOSITIVES and
% NUMNEGATIVES.
%
% Stable:: false
% If set to true, RECALL and PRECISION are returned the same order
% of LABELS and SCORES rather than being sorted by decreasing
% score (increasing recall). Samples with -INF scores are assigned
% RECALL and PRECISION equal to NaN.
%
% NormalizePrior:: []
% If set to a scalar, reweights positive and negative labels so
% that the fraction of positive ones is equal to the specified
% value. This computes the normalised PR curves of [2]
%
% About the PR curve::
% This section uses the same symbols used in the documentation of
% the VL_ROC() function. In addition to those quantities, define:
%
% PRECISION(S) = TP(S) / (TP(S) + FP(S))
% RECALL(S) = TPR(S) = TP(S) / P
%
% The precision is the fraction of positivie predictions which are
% correct, and the recall is the fraction of positive labels that
% have been correctly classified (recalled). Notice that the recall
% is also equal to the true positive rate for the ROC curve (see
% VL_ROC()).
%
% REFERENCES:
% [1] C. D. Manning, P. Raghavan, and H. Schutze. An Introduction to
% Information Retrieval. Cambridge University Press, 2008.
% [2] D. Hoiem, Y. Chodpathumwan, and Q. Dai. Diagnosing error in
% object detectors. In Proc. ECCV, 2012.
%
% See also VL_ROC(), VL_HELP().
% Author: Andrea Vedaldi
% 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 and FP are the vectors of true positie and false positve label
% counts for decreasing scores, P and N are the total number of
% positive and negative labels. Note that if certain options are used
% some labels may actually not be stored explicitly by LABELS, so P+N
% can be larger than the number of element of LABELS.
[tp, fp, p, n, perm, varargin] = vl_tpfp(labels, scores, varargin{:}) ;
opts.stable = false ;
opts.interpolate = false ;
opts.normalizePrior = [] ;
opts = vl_argparse(opts,varargin) ;
% compute precision and recall
small = 1e-10 ;
recall = tp / max(p, small) ;
if isempty(opts.normalizePrior)
precision = max(tp, small) ./ max(tp + fp, small) ;
else
a = opts.normalizePrior ;
precision = max(tp * a/max(p,small), small) ./ ...
max(tp * a/max(p,small) + fp * (1-a)/max(n,small), small) ;
end
% interpolate precision if needed
if opts.interpolate
precision = fliplr(vl_cummax(fliplr(precision))) ;
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
% Additional info
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
if nargout > 2 || nargout == 0
% area under the curve using trapezoid interpolation
if ~opts.interpolate
if numel(precision) > 1
info.auc = 0.5 * sum((precision(1:end-1) + precision(2:end)) .* diff(recall)) ;
else
info.auc = 0 ;
end
end
% average precision (for each recalled positive sample)
sel = find(diff(recall)) + 1 ;
info.ap = sum(precision(sel)) / p ;
if opts.interpolate
info.auc = info.ap ;
end
% TREC 11 points average interpolated precision
info.ap_interp_11 = 0.0 ;
for rc = linspace(0,1,11)
pr = max([0, precision(recall >= rc)]) ;
info.ap_interp_11 = info.ap_interp_11 + pr / 11 ;
end
% legacy definition
info.auc_pa08 = info.ap_interp_11 ;
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
% Plot
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
if nargout == 0
cla ; hold on ;
plot(recall,precision,'linewidth',2) ;
if isempty(opts.normalizePrior)
randomPrecision = p / (p + n) ;
else
randomPrecision = opts.normalizePrior ;
end
spline([0 1], [1 1] * randomPrecision, 'r--', 'linewidth', 2) ;
axis square ; grid on ;
xlim([0 1]) ; xlabel('recall') ;
ylim([0 1]) ; ylabel('precision') ;
title(sprintf('PR (AUC: %.2f%%, AP: %.2f%%, AP11: %.2f%%)', ...
info.auc * 100, ...
info.ap * 100, ...
info.ap_interp_11 * 100)) ;
if opts.interpolate
legend('PR interp.', 'PR rand.', 'Location', 'SouthEast') ;
else
legend('PR', 'PR rand.', 'Location', 'SouthEast') ;
end
clear recall precision info ;
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
% Stable output
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
if opts.stable
precision(1) = [] ;
recall(1) = [] ;
precision_ = precision ;
recall_ = recall ;
precision = NaN(size(precision)) ;
recall = NaN(size(recall)) ;
precision(perm) = precision_ ;
recall(perm) = recall_ ;
end
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
function h = spline(x,y,spec,varargin)
% --------------------------------------------------------------------
prop = vl_linespec2prop(spec) ;
h = line(x,y,prop{:},varargin{:}) ;