PySwarms is an extensible research toolkit for particle swarm optimization (PSO) in Python.
It is intended for swarm intelligence researchers, practitioners, and students who would like a high-level declarative interface of implementing PSO in their problems. PySwarms both allows basic optimization with PSO and interaction with swarm optimizations. Interaction is enabled due to object primitives provided by the package for optimization. This makes PySwarms useful for researchers or students.
- Free software: MIT license
- Documentation: https://pyswarms.readthedocs.io.
- Python versions: 2.7, 3.4, 3.5 and above
- High-level module for Particle Swarm Optimization. For a list of all optimizers, check this link.
- Built-in objective functions to test optimization algorithms.
- Plotting environment for cost histories and particle movement.
- Hyperparameter search tools to optimize swarm behaviour.
- (For Devs and Researchers): Highly-extensible API for implementing your own techniques.
- numpy >= 1.13.0
- scipy >= 0.17.0
- matplotlib >= 1.3.1
To install PySwarms, run this command in your terminal:
$ pip install pyswarms
This is the preferred method to install PySwarms, as it will always install the most recent stable release.
In case you want to install the bleeding-edge version, clone this repo:
$ git clone https://github.com/ljvmiranda921/pyswarms.git
and then run
$ python setup.py install
PySwarms provides a high-level implementation of various particle swarm optimization algorithms. Thus, it aims to be very easy to use and customize. Moreover, supporting modules can also be used to help you in your optimization problem.
You can import PySwarms as any other Python module,
import pyswarms as ps
Suppose we want to find the minima of f(x) = x^2 using global best PSO, simply import the
built-in sphere function, pyswarms.utils.functions.sphere_func()
, and the necessary optimizer:
import pyswarms as ps
from pyswarms.utils.functions import single_obj as fx
# Set-up hyperparameters
options = {'c1': 0.5, 'c2': 0.3, 'w':0.9}
# Call instance of PSO
optimizer = ps.single.GlobalBestPSO(n_particles=10, dimensions=2, options=options)
# Perform optimization
best_cost, best_pos = optimizer.optimize(fx.sphere_func, iters=100, verbose=3, print_step=25)
>>> 2017-10-03 10:12:33,859 - pyswarms.single.global_best - INFO - Iteration 1/100, cost: 0.131244226714 >>> 2017-10-03 10:12:33,878 - pyswarms.single.global_best - INFO - Iteration 26/100, cost: 1.60297958653e-05 >>> 2017-10-03 10:12:33,893 - pyswarms.single.global_best - INFO - Iteration 51/100, cost: 1.60297958653e-05 >>> 2017-10-03 10:12:33,906 - pyswarms.single.global_best - INFO - Iteration 76/100, cost: 2.12638727702e-06 >>> 2017-10-03 10:12:33,921 - pyswarms.single.global_best - INFO - ================================ Optimization finished! Final cost: 0.0000 Best value: [-0.0003521098028145481, -0.00045459382339127453]
This will run the optimizer for 100
iterations, and will return the best cost and best
position found by the swarm. In addition, you can also access various histories by calling on
properties of the class:
# Obtain the cost history
optimizer.get_cost_history
# Obtain the position history
optimizer.get_pos_history
# Obtain the velocity history
optimizer.get_velocity_history
At the same time, you can also obtain the mean personal best and mean neighbor
history for local best PSO implementations. Simply call mean_pbest_history
and optimizer.get_mean_neighbor_history
respectively.
PySwarms implements a grid search and random search technique to find the best
parameters for your optimizer. Setting them up is easy. In this example,
let's try using pyswarms.utils.search.RandomSearch
to find the optimal
parameters for LocalBestPSO
optimizer.
Here, we input a range, enclosed in tuples, to define the space in which
the parameters will be found. Thus, (1,5)
pertains to a range from
1 to 5.
import numpy as np
import pyswarms as ps
from pyswarms.utils.search import RandomSearch
from pyswarms.utils.functions import single_obj as fx
# Set-up choices for the parameters
options = {
'c1': (1,5),
'c2': (6,10),
'w': (2,5),
'k': (11, 15),
'p': 1
}
# Create a RandomSearch object
# n_selection_iters is the number of iterations to run the searcher
# iters is the number of iterations to run the optimizer
g = RandomSearch(ps.single.LocalBestPSO, n_particles=40,
dimensions=20, options=options, objective_func=fx.sphere_func,
iters=10, n_selection_iters=100)
best_score, best_options = g.search()
This then returns the best score found during optimization, and the hyperparameter options that enables it.
>>> best_score
1.41978545901
>>> best_options['c1']
1.543556887693
>>> best_options['c2']
9.504769054771
It is also possible to plot optimizer performance for the sake of formatting.
The plotting environment is built on top of matplotlib
, making it
highly-customizable.
The environment takes in the optimizer and its parameters, then performs a fresh run to plot the cost and create animation.
import pyswarms as ps
from pyswarms.utils.functions import single_obj as fx
from pyswarms.utils.environments import PlotEnvironment
# Set-up optimizer
options = {'c1':0.5, 'c2':0.3, 'w':0.9}
optimizer = ps.single.GlobalBestPSO(n_particles=10, dimensions=3, options=options)
# Initialize plot environment
plt_env = PlotEnvironment(optimizer, fx.sphere_func, 1000)
# Plot the cost
plt_env.plot_cost(figsize=(8,6));
plt.show()
We can also plot the animation,
plt_env.plot_particles2D(limits=((-1.2,1.2),(-1.2,1.2))
PySwarms is currently maintained by a single person (me!) with the aid of a few but very helpful contributors. We would appreciate it if you can lend a hand with the following:
- Find bugs and fix them
- Update documentation in docstrings
- Implement new optimizers to our collection
- Make utility functions more robust.
If you wish to contribute, check out our contributing guide in this link. Moreover, you can also see the list of features that need some help in our Issues page and in this list.
Most importantly, first time contributors are welcome to join! I try my best to help you get started and enable you to make your first Pull Request! Let's learn from each other!
This project was inspired by the pyswarm module that performs PSO with constrained support. The package was created with Cookiecutter and the audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage project template.
This is currently maintained by Lester James V. Miranda with other helpful contributors (v.0.1.7):
- Carl-K (@Carl-K)
- Siobhán Cronin (@SioKCronin)
- Andrew Jarcho (@jazcap53)
- Charalampos Papadimitriou (@CPapadim)
- Mamady Nabé (@mamadyonline)
- Erik (@slek120)
Are you using PySwarms in your project or research? Please cite us!
- Miranda L.J., (2018). PySwarms: a research toolkit for Particle Swarm Optimization in Python. Journal of Open Source Software, 3(21), 433, https://doi.org/joss.00433
@article{pyswarmsJOSS2018,
author = {Lester James V. Miranda},
title = "{P}y{S}warms, a research-toolkit for {P}article {S}warm {O}ptimization in {P}ython",
journal = {Journal of Open Source Software},
year = {2018},
volume = {3},
issue = {21},
doi = {10.21105/joss.00433},
url = {https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.00433}
}
- Nandy, Abhishek, and Manisha Biswas., "Applying Python to Reinforcement Learning." Reinforcement Learning. Apress, Berkeley, CA, 2018. 89-128.
- Benedetti, Marcello, et al., "A generative modeling approach for benchmarking and training shallow quantum circuits." arXiv preprint arXiv:1801.07686 (2018).
- Vrbančič et al., "NiaPy: Python microframework for building nature-inspired algorithms." Journal of Open Source Software, 3(23), 613, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.00613
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