A tensorflow
implementation of DRSA model. This is the experiment code for our AAAI 2019 paper "Deep Recurrent Survival Analysis".
If you have any problems, please feel free to contact the authors Kan Ren, Jiarui Qin and Lei Zheng.
Survival analysis is a hotspot in statistical research for modeling time-to-event information with data censorship handling, which has been widely used in many applications such as clinical research, information system and other fields with survivorship bias. Many works have been proposed for survival analysis ranging from traditional statistic methods to machine learning models. However, the existing methodologies either utilize counting-based statistics on the segmented data, or have a pre-assumption on the event probability distribution w.r.t. time. Moreover, few works consider sequential patterns within the feature space. In this paper, we propose a Deep Recurrent Survival Analysis model which combines deep learning for conditional probability prediction at fine-grained level of the data, and survival analysis for tackling the censorship. By capturing the time dependency through modeling the conditional probability of the event for each sample, our method predicts the likelihood of the true event occurrence and estimates the survival rate over time, i.e., the probability of the non-occurrence of the event, for the censored data. Meanwhile, without assuming any specific form of the event probability distribution, our model shows great advantages over the previous works on fitting various sophisticated data distributions. In the experiments on the three real-world tasks from different fields, our model significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art solutions under various metrics.
Our model is DRSA
model. The baseline models are Kaplan-Meier
, Lasso-Cox
, Gamma
, MTLSA
, STM
, DeepSurv
, DeepHit
, DRN
, and DRSA
.
Among the baseline implementations, we forked the code of STM and MTLSA.
We made some minor modifications on the two projects to fit in our experiments. To get the modified code, you may click MTLSA @ ba353f8 and STM @ df57e70. Many thanks to the authors of STM
and MTLSA
.
Other baselines' implementations are in python
directory.
We have uploaded a tiny data sample for training and evaluation.
The full dataset for this project can be directly downloaded from this link: https://goo.gl/nUFND4. This dataset contains three large-scale datasets in three real-world tasks, which is the first dataset with such scale for experiment reproduction in survival analysis.
After download please replace the sample data in data/
folder with the full data files.
Dataset | MD5 Code | Size |
---|---|---|
drsa.zip | b63c53559f58e6afa62c121b0dd1997d | 2.6 GB |
We have three datasets and each of them contains .yzbx.txt
, featureindex.txt
and .log.txt
.
We created the first data file .log.txt
from the raw data of the original data source (please refer to our paper).
Then we made feature engineering according to the created feature dictionary featindex.txt
.
The corresponding feature engineered data are in .yzbx.txt
.
If you need to reproduce the experiemtns, you may run over .yzbx.txt
.
If you want to dive deep and explain the observations of experiments, you would need to look into the the other files like .log.txt
and featindex.txt
.
In yzbx.txt
file, each line is a sample containing the "yztx
" data (here we use t
and b
exchangably), the information is splitted by SPACE
.
Here z
is the true event time, t
is the observation time and x
is the list of features (multi-hot encoded as feat_id:1
).
In the experiment, we only use ztx
data.
Note that, for the uncensored data, z <= t
, while for the censored data, z > t
.
We conduct a simulation of observation experiments which ranges from the whole timeline of each dataset. Then the end of each observation (in right-censored situation) is tracked as t
in the final data yztx
along with the true event time z
.
The true event time z
is originally logged in the raw data file.
The raw data file (without any feature engineering) is from the other related works as described in the exp. part of our paper. We put the download links as below:
- clinic: http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/wiki/Main/DataSets (supposed to be support2csv.zip, but the raw CLINIC dataset is somehow different, so we have uploaded the raw dataset in this repository.)
- music: https://www.dtic.upf.edu/~ocelma/MusicRecommendationDataset/lastfm-1K.html
- bidding: https://github.com/rk2900/make-ipinyou-data
TensorFlow(>=1.3) and the other dependant packages (e.g., numpy
, sklearn
and matplotlib
) should be pre-installed before running the code. The Python version we used is 2.7.6.
After package installation, you can simply run the code in python
directory with the demo tiny dataset(sampled from BIDDING dataset). The outputs of the code are in python/output
directory.
The running command are listed as below.
python km.py # for Kaplan-Meier
python gamma_model.py # for Gamma
python cox.py # for Lasso-Cox and DeepSurv
python deephit.py # for DeepHit
python DRN.py 0.0001 # for DRN
python DRSA.py 0.0001 # for DRSA
We have set default hyperparameters in the model implementation. So the parameter arguments are optional for running the code.
The results will be printed on the screen with the format: Subset, Train/Test, Step, Cross Entropy, AUC(C-index), ANLP, Total Loss, batch size, hidden state size, learing rate, anlp learning rate, alpha, beta.
You are more than welcome to cite our paper:
@article{ren2019deep,
title={Deep Recurrent Survival Analysis},
author={Ren, Kan and Qin, Jiarui and Zheng, Lei and Yang, Zhengyu and Zhang, Weinan and Qiu, Lin and Yu, Yong},
year={2019},
organization={AAAI}
}