mvpa2.mappers.boxcar.Mapper

Inheritance diagram of Mapper

class mvpa2.mappers.boxcar.Mapper(**kwargs)

Basic mapper interface definition.

.. rubric:: Notes

Available conditional attributes:

  • calling_time+: None
  • raw_results: None
  • trained_dataset: None
  • trained_nsamples+: None
  • trained_targets+: None
  • training_time+: None

(Conditional attributes enabled by default suffixed with +)

Methods

Parameters:

enable_ca : None or list of str

Names of the conditional attributes which should be enabled in addition to the default ones

disable_ca : None or list of str

Names of the conditional attributes which should be disabled

auto_train : bool

Flag whether the learner will automatically train itself on the input dataset when called untrained.

force_train : bool

Flag whether the learner will enforce training on the input dataset upon every call.

space : str, optional

Name of the ‘processing space’. The actual meaning of this argument heavily depends on the sub-class implementation. In general, this is a trigger that tells the node to compute and store information about the input data that is “interesting” in the context of the corresponding processing in the output dataset.

pass_attr : str, list of str|tuple, optional

Additional attributes to pass on to an output dataset. Attributes can be taken from all three attribute collections of an input dataset (sa, fa, a – see Dataset.get_attr()), or from the collection of conditional attributes (ca) of a node instance. Corresponding collection name prefixes should be used to identify attributes, e.g. ‘ca.null_prob’ for the conditional attribute ‘null_prob’, or ‘fa.stats’ for the feature attribute stats. In addition to a plain attribute identifier it is possible to use a tuple to trigger more complex operations. The first tuple element is the attribute identifier, as described before. The second element is the name of the target attribute collection (sa, fa, or a). The third element is the axis number of a multidimensional array that shall be swapped with the current first axis. The fourth element is a new name that shall be used for an attribute in the output dataset. Example: (‘ca.null_prob’, ‘fa’, 1, ‘pvalues’) will take the conditional attribute ‘null_prob’ and store it as a feature attribute ‘pvalues’, while swapping the first and second axes. Simplified instructions can be given by leaving out consecutive tuple elements starting from the end.

postproc : Node instance, optional

Node to perform post-processing of results. This node is applied in __call__() to perform a final processing step on the to be result dataset. If None, nothing is done.

descr : str

Description of the instance

Methods

forward(data)

Map data from input to output space.

Parameters:

data : Dataset-like, (at least 2D)-array-like

Typically this is a Dataset, but it might also be a plain data array, or even something completely different(TM) that is supported by a subclass’ implementation. If such an object is Dataset-like it is handled by a dedicated method that also transforms dataset attributes if necessary. If an array-like is passed, it has to be at least two-dimensional, with the first axis separating samples or observations. For single samples forward1() might be more appropriate.

forward1(data)

Wrapper method to map single samples.

It is basically identical to forward(), but also accepts one-dimensional arguments. The map whole dataset this method cannot be used. but forward() handles them.

reverse(data)

Reverse-map data from output back into input space.

Parameters:

data : Dataset-like, anything

Typically this is a Dataset, but it might also be a plain data array, or even something completely different(TM) that is supported by a subclass’ implementation. If such an object is Dataset-like it is handled by a dedicated method that also transforms dataset attributes if necessary.

reverse1(data)

Wrapper method to map single samples.

It is basically identical to reverse(), but accepts one-dimensional arguments. To map whole dataset this method cannot be used. but reverse() handles them.