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python - Efficient pairwise correlation for two matrices of features

In Python I need to find the pairwise correlation between all features in a matrix A and all features in a matrix B. In particular, I am interesting in finding the strongest Pearson correlation that a given feature in A has across all features in B. I do not care whether the strongest correlation is positive or negative.

I've done a inefficient implementation using two loops and scipy below. However, I'd like to use np.corrcoef or another similar method to compute it efficiently. Matrix A has shape 40000x400 and B has shape 40000x1440. My attempt at doing it efficiently can be seen below as the method find_max_absolute_corr(A,B). However, it fails with the following error:

ValueError: all the input array dimensions except for the concatenation axis must match exactly.

import numpy as np
from scipy.stats import pearsonr


def find_max_absolute_corr(A, B):
    """ Finds for each feature in `A` the highest Pearson
        correlation across all features in `B`. """

    max_corr_A = np.zeros((A.shape[1]))    

    for A_col in range(A.shape[1]):
        print "Calculating {}/{}.".format(A_col+1, A.shape[1])

        metric = A[:,A_col]
        pearson = np.corrcoef(B, metric, rowvar=0)

        # takes negative correlations into account as well
        min_p = min(pearson)
        max_p = max(pearson)
        max_corr_A[A_col] = max_absolute(min_p, max_p)

    return max_corr_A


def max_absolute(min_p, max_p):
    if np.isnan(min_p) or np.isnan(max_p):
        raise ValueError("NaN correlation.")
    if abs(max_p) > abs(min_p):
        return max_p
    else:
        return min_p


if __name__ == '__main__':

    A = np.array(
        [[10, 8.04, 9.14, 7.46],
         [8, 6.95, 8.14, 6.77],
         [13, 7.58, 8.74, 12.74],
         [9, 8.81, 8.77, 7.11],
         [11, 8.33, 9.26, 7.81]])

    B = np.array(
        [[-14, -9.96, 8.10, 8.84, 8, 7.04], 
         [-6, -7.24, 6.13, 6.08, 5, 5.25], 
         [-4, -4.26, 3.10, 5.39, 8, 5.56], 
         [-12, -10.84, 9.13, 8.15, 5, 7.91], 
         [-7, -4.82, 7.26, 6.42, 8, 6.89]])

    # simple, inefficient method
    for A_col in range(A.shape[1]): 
        high_corr = 0
        for B_col in range(B.shape[1]):
            corr,_ = pearsonr(A[:,A_col], B[:,B_col])
            high_corr = max_absolute(high_corr, corr)
        print high_corr

    # -0.161314601631
    # 0.956781516149
    # 0.621071009239
    # -0.421539304112        

    # efficient method
    max_corr_A = find_max_absolute_corr(A, B)
    print max_corr_A

    # [-0.161314601631,
    # 0.956781516149,
    # 0.621071009239,
    # -0.421539304112]  
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1 Answer

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Seems scipy.stats.pearsonr follows this definition of Pearson Correlation Coefficient Formula applied on column-wise pairs from A & B -

enter image description here

Based on that formula, you can vectorized easily as the pairwise computations of columns from A and B are independent of each other. Here's one vectorized solution using broadcasting -

# Get number of rows in either A or B
N = B.shape[0]

# Store columnw-wise in A and B, as they would be used at few places
sA = A.sum(0)
sB = B.sum(0)

# Basically there are four parts in the formula. We would compute them one-by-one
p1 = N*np.einsum('ij,ik->kj',A,B)
p2 = sA*sB[:,None]
p3 = N*((B**2).sum(0)) - (sB**2)
p4 = N*((A**2).sum(0)) - (sA**2)

# Finally compute Pearson Correlation Coefficient as 2D array 
pcorr = ((p1 - p2)/np.sqrt(p4*p3[:,None]))

# Get the element corresponding to absolute argmax along the columns 
out = pcorr[np.nanargmax(np.abs(pcorr),axis=0),np.arange(pcorr.shape[1])]

Sample run -

1) Inputs :

In [12]: A
Out[12]: 
array([[ 10.  ,   8.04,   9.14,   7.46],
       [  8.  ,   6.95,   8.14,   6.77],
       [ 13.  ,   7.58,   8.74,  12.74],
       [  9.  ,   8.81,   8.77,   7.11],
       [ 11.  ,   8.33,   9.26,   7.81]])

In [13]: B
Out[13]: 
array([[-14.  ,  -9.96,   8.1 ,   8.84,   8.  ,   7.04],
       [ -6.  ,  -7.24,   6.13,   6.08,   5.  ,   5.25],
       [ -4.  ,  -4.26,   3.1 ,   5.39,   8.  ,   5.56],
       [-12.  , -10.84,   9.13,   8.15,   5.  ,   7.91],
       [ -7.  ,  -4.82,   7.26,   6.42,   8.  ,   6.89]])

2) Original loopy code run -

In [14]: high_corr_out = np.zeros(A.shape[1])
    ...: for A_col in range(A.shape[1]): 
    ...:     high_corr = 0
    ...:     for B_col in range(B.shape[1]):
    ...:         corr,_ = pearsonr(A[:,A_col], B[:,B_col])
    ...:         high_corr = max_absolute(high_corr, corr)
    ...:     high_corr_out[A_col] = high_corr
    ...:     

In [15]: high_corr_out
Out[15]: array([ 0.8067843 ,  0.95678152,  0.74016181, -0.85127779])

3) Proposed code run -

In [16]: N = B.shape[0]
    ...: sA = A.sum(0)
    ...: sB = B.sum(0)
    ...: p1 = N*np.einsum('ij,ik->kj',A,B)
    ...: p2 = sA*sB[:,None]
    ...: p3 = N*((B**2).sum(0)) - (sB**2)
    ...: p4 = N*((A**2).sum(0)) - (sA**2)
    ...: pcorr = ((p1 - p2)/np.sqrt(p4*p3[:,None]))
    ...: out = pcorr[np.nanargmax(np.abs(pcorr),axis=0),np.arange(pcorr.shape[1])]
    ...: 

In [17]: pcorr # Pearson Correlation Coefficient array
Out[17]: 
array([[ 0.41895565, -0.5910935 , -0.40465987,  0.5818286 ],
       [ 0.66609445, -0.41950457,  0.02450215,  0.64028344],
       [-0.64953314,  0.65669916,  0.30836196, -0.85127779],
       [-0.41917583,  0.59043266,  0.40364532, -0.58144102],
       [ 0.8067843 ,  0.07947386,  0.74016181,  0.53165395],
       [-0.1613146 ,  0.95678152,  0.62107101, -0.4215393 ]])

In [18]: out # elements corresponding to absolute argmax along columns
Out[18]: array([ 0.8067843 ,  0.95678152,  0.74016181, -0.85127779])

Runtime tests -

In [36]: A = np.random.rand(4000,40)

In [37]: B = np.random.rand(4000,144)

In [38]: np.allclose(org_app(A,B),proposed_app(A,B))
Out[38]: True

In [39]: %timeit org_app(A,B) # Original approach
1 loops, best of 3: 1.35 s per loop

In [40]: %timeit proposed_app(A,B) # Proposed vectorized approach
10 loops, best of 3: 39.1 ms per loop

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