Handling sparsity

The one sentence introduction to metatensor mentions that this is a “self-describing sparse tensor data format”. The previous tutorial explained the self-describing part of the format, and in this tutorial we will explore what makes metatensor a sparse format; and how to remove the corresponding sparsity when required.

Like in the previous tutorial, we will load the data we need from a file. The code used to generate this file can be found below:

Show the code used to generate the radial-spectrum.npz file

The data was generated with rascaline, a package to compute atomistic representations for machine learning applications.

import ase
from rascaline import SoapRadialSpectrum

import metatensor


atoms = ase.Atoms(
    "COO2N2",
    positions=[(0, 0, 0), (1.2, 0, 0), (0, 6, 0), (1.1, 6, 0), (6, 0, 0), (7.3, 0, 0)],
)

calculator = SoapRadialSpectrum(
    cutoff=2.5,
    max_radial=3,
    atomic_gaussian_width=0.2,
    radial_basis={"Gto": {}},
    center_atom_weight=1.0,
    cutoff_function={"ShiftedCosine": {"width": 0.5}},
)

descriptor = calculator.compute(atoms, gradients=["positions"])

metatensor.save("radial-spectrum.npz", descriptor)

The file contains a representation of two molecules called the radial spectrum. The atom \(i\) is represented by the radial spectrum \(R_i^\alpha\), which is an expansion of the neighbor density \(\rho_i^\alpha(r)\) on a set of radial basis functions \(f_n(r)\)

\[R_i^\alpha(n) = \int f_n(r) \rho_i(r) dr\]

The density \(\rho_i^\alpha(r)\) associated with all neighbors of species \(\alpha\) of the atom \(i\) (each neighbor is replaced with a Gaussian function centered on the neighbor \(g(r_{ij})\)) is defined as:

\[\rho_i^\alpha(r) = \sum_{j \in \text{ neighborhood of i }} g(r_{ij}) \delta_{\alpha_j,\alpha}\]

The exact mathematical details above don’t matter too much for this tutorial, the main point being that this representation treats atomic species as completely independent, effectively using the neighbor species \(\alpha\) for one-hot encoding.

import ase
import ase.visualize.plot
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

import metatensor

We will work on the radial spectrum representation of three molecules in our system: a carbon monoxide, an oxygen molecule and a nitrogen molecule.

atoms = ase.Atoms(
    "COO2N2",
    positions=[(0, 0, 0), (1.2, 0, 0), (0, 6, 0), (1.1, 6, 0), (6, 0, 0), (7.3, 0, 0)],
)

fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(3, 3))
ase.visualize.plot.plot_atoms(atoms, ax)
ax.set_axis_off()
plt.show()
2 handling sparsity

Sparsity in TensorMap

The radial spectrum representation has two keys: central_species indicating the species of the central atom (atom \(i\) in the equations); and neighbor_type indicating the species of the neighboring atoms (atom \(j\) in the equations)

radial_spectrum = metatensor.load("radial-spectrum.npz")

print(radial_spectrum)
TensorMap with 5 blocks
keys: center_type  neighbor_type
           6             6
           6             8
           7             7
           8             6
           8             8

This shows the first level of sparsity in TensorMap: block sparsity.

Out of all possible combinations of central_species and neighbor_type, some are missing such as central_species=7, neighbor_type=8. This is because we are using a spherical cutoff of 2.5 Å, and as such there are no oxygen neighbor atoms close enough to the nitrogen centers. This means that all the corresponding radial spectrum coefficients \(R_i^\alpha(n)\) will be zero (since the neighbor density \(\rho_i^\alpha(r)\) is zero everywhere).

Instead of wasting memory space by storing all of these zeros explicitly, we simply avoid creating the corresponding blocks from the get-go and save a lot of memory!

Let’s now look at the block containing the representation for oxygen centers and carbon neighbors:

block = radial_spectrum.block(center_type=8, neighbor_type=6)

Naively, this block should contain samples for all oxygen atoms (since center_type=8); in practice we only have a single sample!

print(block.samples)
Labels(
    system  atom
      0      1
)

There is a second level of sparsity happening here, using a format related to coordinate sparse arrays (COO format). Since there is only one oxygen atom with carbon neighbors, we only include this atom in the samples, and the density/radial spectrum coefficient for all the other oxygen atoms is assumed to be zero.

Making the data dense again

Sometimes, we might have to use data in a sparse metatensor format with code that does not understands this sparsity. One solution is to convert the data to a dense format, making the zeros explicit as much as possible. Metatensor provides functionalities to convert sparse data to a dense format for the keys sparsity; and metadata to convert to a dense format for sample sparsity.

First, the sample sparsity can be removed block by block by creating a new array full of zeros, and copying the data according to the indices in block.samples

dense_block_data = np.zeros((len(atoms), block.values.shape[1]))

# only copy the non-zero data stored in the block
dense_block_data[block.samples["atom"]] = block.values

print(dense_block_data)
[[0.         0.         0.        ]
 [0.05052215 0.13111562 0.01025378]
 [0.         0.         0.        ]
 [0.         0.         0.        ]
 [0.         0.         0.        ]
 [0.         0.         0.        ]]

Alternatively, we can undo the keys sparsity with TensorMap.keys_to_samples() and TensorMap.keys_to_properties(), which merge multiple blocks along the samples or properties dimensions respectively.

Which one of these functions to call will depend on the data you are handling. Typically, one-hot encoding (the neighbor_types key here) should be merged along the properties dimension; and keys that define subsets of the samples (center_type) should be merged along the samples dimension.

dense_radial_spectrum = radial_spectrum.keys_to_samples("center_type")
dense_radial_spectrum = dense_radial_spectrum.keys_to_properties("neighbor_type")

After calling these two functions, we now have a TensorMap with a single block and no keys:

print(dense_radial_spectrum)

block = dense_radial_spectrum.block()
TensorMap with 1 blocks
keys: _
      0

We can see that the resulting dense data array contains a lot of zeros (and has a well defined block-sparse structure):

with np.printoptions(precision=3):
    print(block.values)
[[ 0.556 -0.282  0.016  0.051  0.131  0.01   0.     0.     0.   ]
 [ 0.051  0.131  0.01   0.556 -0.282  0.016  0.     0.     0.   ]
 [ 0.     0.     0.     0.633 -0.152  0.017  0.     0.     0.   ]
 [ 0.     0.     0.     0.633 -0.152  0.017  0.     0.     0.   ]
 [ 0.     0.     0.     0.     0.     0.     0.586 -0.157  0.036]
 [ 0.     0.     0.     0.     0.     0.     0.586 -0.157  0.036]]

And using the metadata attached to the block, we can understand which part of the data is zero and why. For example, the lower-right corner of the array corresponds to nitrogen atoms (the last two samples):

print(block.samples.print(max_entries=-1))
system  atom  center_type
  0      0         6
  0      1         8
  0      2         8
  0      3         8
  0      4         7
  0      5         7

And these two bottom rows are zero everywhere, except in the part representing the nitrogen neighbor density:

print(block.properties.print(max_entries=-1))
neighbor_type  n
      6        0
      6        1
      6        2
      8        0
      8        1
      8        2
      7        0
      7        1
      7        2

Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 0.036 seconds)

Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery