tf.keras.metrics.MeanSquaredError

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Computes the mean squared error between y_true and y_pred.

For example, if y_true is [0., 0., 1., 1.], and y_pred is [1., 1., 1., 0.] the mean squared error is 3/4 (0.75).

Usage:

m = tf.keras.metrics.MeanSquaredError()
m.update_state([0., 0., 1., 1.], [1., 1., 1., 0.])
print('Final result: ', m.result().numpy())  # Final result: 0.75

Usage with tf.keras API:

model = tf.keras.Model(inputs, outputs)
model.compile('sgd', metrics=[tf.keras.metrics.MeanSquaredError()])
Args
fn The metric function to wrap, with signature fn(y_true, y_pred, **kwargs).
name (Optional) string name of the metric instance.
dtype (Optional) data type of the metric result.
**kwargs The keyword arguments that are passed on to fn.

Methods

reset_states

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Resets all of the metric state variables.

This function is called between epochs/steps, when a metric is evaluated during training.

result

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Computes and returns the metric value tensor.

Result computation is an idempotent operation that simply calculates the metric value using the state variables.

update_state

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Accumulates metric statistics.

y_true and y_pred should have the same shape.

Args
y_true The ground truth values.
y_pred The predicted values.
sample_weight Optional weighting of each example. Defaults to 1. Can be a Tensor whose rank is either 0, or the same rank as y_true, and must be broadcastable to y_true.
Returns
Update op.

© 2020 The TensorFlow Authors. All rights reserved.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0.
Code samples licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
https://www.tensorflow.org/versions/r1.15/api_docs/python/tf/keras/metrics/MeanSquaredError