How to manually construct or modify a cross-validation object in MATLAB?
9 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Vilmantas Gegzna
on 14 Apr 2015
Commented: Alex Ryabov
on 30 May 2024
Short question:
I want your help to manually construct or modify Matlab cross-validation (CV) object created using function cvpartition when it's known which observations belong to training and which to validation partitions.
Extended question:
I have a kind of specific dataset in which several observations (each represented by a separate row) belong to the same object of investigation (e.g. measurements of the same object were performed several times). Each object (and it's observation) belongs to a certain class (e.g. yellow object, green object, etc.) as well. The problem is this: it's needed a CV object in which all observations of the same object belong to the same (either training or validation) partition as a block of data (unfortunately I'm not sure how to implement this) and the data would be distributed to partitions in stratified way (luckily, this is implemented in function cvpartition). I tried to access indices of CV object (cvo.indices) but they are locked. Here cvo is:
cvType = 'kfold';
nPartitions = 5;
cvo = cvpartition(my_classes,cvType,nPartitions);
Your insights and ideas how to construct or modify cvo manually are welcomed.
2 Comments
Jan
on 20 Dec 2018
This solution no longer works - was there a concurrent patch that provided a workaround?
@James: This is the question. Which solution do you mean?
Rik
on 29 Mar 2021
Comment posted as flag by patrck rich:
the solution is no longer working in recent versions
That is always a risk when trying to modify internal files. However, I ran the lines below in the online interface (I cleared the output, as I don't expect Mathworks would be happy with me sharing their files..)
%type(which('cvpartition'))
OS={'Windows','macOS','Linux'};fprintf('This is version %s, running on %s.',version,OS{[ispc ismac isunix&&~ismac]})
As far as I can judge from the code I can read, I don't see a reason why it wouldn't still work, but feel free to post a comment explaining which exact steps you took and which lines you modified.
Accepted Answer
Vilmantas Gegzna
on 22 Apr 2015
Edited: Vilmantas Gegzna
on 22 Apr 2015
2 Comments
RZM
on 6 Jul 2018
I cannot change the properties, it pops up an error message that Access is denied!
Sergio Gutierrez
on 11 Aug 2018
I have done the same modification as Albert Sama said in the below comment. You require administrative rights to make changes. I used Notepad++ in administrator mode.
More Answers (3)
Jo
on 4 Nov 2016
Hi,
It seems that one year later your solution is not working anymore, maybe they changed the function.
Indeed, I tried to modify as you suggested "properties(GetAccess = 'public', SetAccess = 'public')", but it only allows me to access to the number of observations and not the indices. Indices are created by "methods" defined in cvpartition.m (test, training). And I do not understand how to change these to choose my own indices.
Maybe if you have progessed in all that since you first posted your question.... I would be really greatful to have some help in there.
Using random crossvalidation is of none interest for me, I need to choose the block myself to have a more robust solution. Thanks to anyone that can help me!!!
3 Comments
Evelyn Tang
on 9 Nov 2018
This is wonderful and just what I need, thank you so much! Works perfectly :)
Alex Ryabov
on 30 May 2024
This solution works for me also, maltab 2023a.
In windows I had to run Notepad as admin to be able to edit the file
Roberto Herrera-Lara
on 14 Apr 2015
try to do this https://chrisjmccormick.wordpress.com/2013/07/31/k-fold-cross-validation-with-matlab-code/
1 Comment
John Smith
on 21 Nov 2018
Two small additions:
1.You need to update the toolbox cache https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/matlab_env/toolbox-path-caching-in-the-matlab-program.html
2.Restart Matlab after that
0 Comments
See Also
Categories
Find more on Language Support in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!