This is a practical, easy to download implemenation of 1D, 2D, and 3D sinusodial positional encodings for PyTorch and Tensorflow.
It is able to encode on tensors of the form (batchsize, x, ch)
, (batchsize, x, y, ch)
, and (batchsize, x, y, z, ch)
, where the positional encodings will
be calculated along the ch
dimension. The Attention is All You
Need allowed for positional encoding in
only one dimension, however, this works to extend this to 2 and 3 dimensions.
This also works on tensors of the form (batchsize, ch, x)
, etc. See the usage for more information.
NOTE: The import syntax has changed as of version 6.0.1
. See the section for details.
To install, simply run:
pip install positional-encodings[pytorch,tensorflow]
You can also install the pytorch and tf encodings individually with the following commands.
- For a PyTorch only installation, run
pip install positional-encodings[pytorch]
- For a TensorFlow only installation, run
pip install positional-encodings[tensorflow]
The repo comes with the three main positional encoding models,
PositionalEncoding{1,2,3}D
. In addition, there are a Summer
class that adds
the input tensor to the positional encodings.
import torch
from positional_encodings.torch_encodings import PositionalEncoding1D, PositionalEncoding2D, PositionalEncoding3D, Summer
# Returns the position encoding only
p_enc_1d_model = PositionalEncoding1D(10)
# Return the inputs with the position encoding added
p_enc_1d_model_sum = Summer(PositionalEncoding1D(10))
x = torch.rand(1,6,10)
penc_no_sum = p_enc_1d_model(x) # penc_no_sum.shape == (1, 6, 10)
penc_sum = p_enc_1d_model_sum(x)
print(penc_no_sum + x == penc_sum) # True
p_enc_2d = PositionalEncoding2D(8)
y = torch.zeros((1,6,2,8))
print(p_enc_2d(y).shape) # (1, 6, 2, 8)
p_enc_3d = PositionalEncoding3D(11)
z = torch.zeros((1,5,6,4,11))
print(p_enc_3d(z).shape) # (1, 5, 6, 4, 11)
And for tensors of the form (batchsize, ch, x)
or their 2D and 3D
counterparts, include the word Permute
before the number in the class; e.g.
for a 1D input of size (batchsize, ch, x)
, do PositionalEncodingPermute1D
instead of PositionalEncoding1D
.
import torch
from positional_encodings.torch_encodings import PositionalEncodingPermute3D
p_enc_3d = PositionalEncodingPermute3D(11)
z = torch.zeros((1,11,5,6,4))
print(p_enc_3d(z).shape) # (1, 11, 5, 6, 4)
This also supports Tensorflow. Simply prepend all class names with TF
.
import tensorflow as tf
from positional_encodings.tf_encodings import TFPositionalEncoding2D, TFSummer
# Returns the position encoding only
p_enc_2d = TFPositionalEncoding2D(170)
y = tf.zeros((1,8,6,2))
print(p_enc_2d(y).shape) # (1, 8, 6, 2)
# Return the inputs with the position encoding added
add_p_enc_2d = TFSummer(TFPositionalEncoding2D(170))
y = tf.ones((1,8,6,2))
print(add_p_enc_2d(y) - p_enc_2d(y)) # tf.ones((1,8,6,2))
Before 6.0.1
, users had to install both the tensorflow
and the
torch
packages, both of which are quite large. Now, one can install the
packages individually, but now the code has to be changed:
If using PyTorch:
from positional_encodings import * -> from positional_encodings.torch_encodings import *
If using TensorFlow:
from positional_encodings import * -> from positional_encodings.tf_encodings import *
The formula for inserting the positional encoding are as follows:
1D:
PE(x,2i) = sin(x/10000^(2i/D))
PE(x,2i+1) = cos(x/10000^(2i/D))
Where:
x is a point in 2d space
i is an integer in [0, D/2), where D is the size of the ch dimension
2D:
PE(x,y,2i) = sin(x/10000^(4i/D))
PE(x,y,2i+1) = cos(x/10000^(4i/D))
PE(x,y,2j+D/2) = sin(y/10000^(4j/D))
PE(x,y,2j+1+D/2) = cos(y/10000^(4j/D))
Where:
(x,y) is a point in 2d space
i,j is an integer in [0, D/4), where D is the size of the ch dimension
3D:
PE(x,y,z,2i) = sin(x/10000^(6i/D))
PE(x,y,z,2i+1) = cos(x/10000^(6i/D))
PE(x,y,z,2j+D/3) = sin(y/10000^(6j/D))
PE(x,y,z,2j+1+D/3) = cos(y/10000^(6j/D))
PE(x,y,z,2k+2D/3) = sin(z/10000^(6k/D))
PE(x,y,z,2k+1+2D/3) = cos(z/10000^(6k/D))
Where:
(x,y,z) is a point in 3d space
i,j,k is an integer in [0, D/6), where D is the size of the ch dimension
The 3D formula is just a natural extension of the 2D positional encoding used in this paper.
Don't worry if the input is not divisible by 2 (1D), 4 (2D), or 6 (3D); all the necessary padding will be taken care of.
Thank you for this repo for inspriration of this method.
1D:
@inproceedings{vaswani2017attention,
title={Attention is all you need},
author={Vaswani, Ashish and Shazeer, Noam and Parmar, Niki and Uszkoreit, Jakob and Jones, Llion and Gomez, Aidan N and Kaiser, {\L}ukasz and Polosukhin, Illia},
booktitle={Advances in neural information processing systems},
pages={5998--6008},
year={2017}
}
2D:
@misc{wang2019translating,
title={Translating Math Formula Images to LaTeX Sequences Using Deep Neural Networks with Sequence-level Training},
author={Zelun Wang and Jyh-Charn Liu},
year={2019},
eprint={1908.11415},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.LG}
}
3D: Coming soon!