Updated Aug 2019
Here is another simple implementation that is pretty fast for modest dimensions. Input points are assumed to be unique.
def keep_efficient(pts):
'returns Pareto efficient row subset of pts'
# sort points by decreasing sum of coordinates
pts = pts[pts.sum(1).argsort()[::-1]]
# initialize a boolean mask for undominated points
# to avoid creating copies each iteration
undominated = np.ones(pts.shape[0], dtype=bool)
for i in range(pts.shape[0]):
# process each point in turn
n = pts.shape[0]
if i >= n:
break
# find all points not dominated by i
# since points are sorted by coordinate sum
# i cannot dominate any points in 1,...,i-1
undominated[i+1:n] = (pts[i+1:] >= pts[i]).any(1)
# keep points undominated so far
pts = pts[undominated[:n]]
return pts
We start by sorting points according to the sum of coordinates. This is useful because
- For many distributions of data, a point with a largest coordinate sum will dominate a large number of points.
- If point
x
has a larger coordinate sum than point y
, then y
cannot dominate x
.
Here are some benchmarks relative to Peter's answer, using np.random.randn
.
N=10000 d=2
keep_efficient
1.31 ms ± 11.6 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000 loops each)
is_pareto_efficient
6.51 ms ± 23.9 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
N=10000 d=3
keep_efficient
2.3 ms ± 13.3 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
is_pareto_efficient
16.4 ms ± 156 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
N=10000 d=4
keep_efficient
4.37 ms ± 38.4 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
is_pareto_efficient
21.1 ms ± 115 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
N=10000 d=5
keep_efficient
15.1 ms ± 491 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
is_pareto_efficient
110 ms ± 1.01 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
N=10000 d=6
keep_efficient
40.1 ms ± 211 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
is_pareto_efficient
279 ms ± 2.54 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
N=10000 d=15
keep_efficient
3.92 s ± 125 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
is_pareto_efficient
5.88 s ± 74.3 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
Convex Hull Heuristic
I ended up looking at this problem recently and found a useful heuristic that works well if there are many points distributed independently and dimensions are few.
The idea is to compute the convex hull of points. With few dimensions and independently distributed points, the number of vertices of the convex hull will be small. Intuitively, we can expect some vertices of the convex hull to dominate many of the original points. Moreover, if a point in a convex hull is not dominated by any other point in the convex hull, then it is also not dominated by any point in the original set.
This gives a simple iterative algorithm. We repeatedly
- Compute the convex hull.
- Save Pareto undominated points from the convex hull.
- Filter the points to remove those dominated by elements of the convex hull.
I add a few benchmarks for dimension 3. It seems that for some distribution of points this approach yields better asymptotics.
import numpy as np
from scipy import spatial
from functools import reduce
# test points
pts = np.random.rand(10_000_000, 3)
def filter_(pts, pt):
"""
Get all points in pts that are not Pareto dominated by the point pt
"""
weakly_worse = (pts <= pt).all(axis=-1)
strictly_worse = (pts < pt).any(axis=-1)
return pts[~(weakly_worse & strictly_worse)]
def get_pareto_undominated_by(pts1, pts2=None):
"""
Return all points in pts1 that are not Pareto dominated
by any points in pts2
"""
if pts2 is None:
pts2 = pts1
return reduce(filter_, pts2, pts1)
def get_pareto_frontier(pts):
"""
Iteratively filter points based on the convex hull heuristic
"""
pareto_groups = []
# loop while there are points remaining
while pts.shape[0]:
# brute force if there are few points:
if pts.shape[0] < 10:
pareto_groups.append(get_pareto_undominated_by(pts))
break
# compute vertices of the convex hull
hull_vertices = spatial.ConvexHull(pts).vertices
# get corresponding points
hull_pts = pts[hull_vertices]
# get points in pts that are not convex hull vertices
nonhull_mask = np.ones(pts.shape[0], dtype=bool)
nonhull_mask[hull_vertices] = False
pts = pts[nonhull_mask]
# get points in the convex hull that are on the Pareto frontier
pareto = get_pareto_undominated_by(hull_pts)
pareto_groups.append(pareto)
# filter remaining points to keep those not dominated by
# Pareto points of the convex hull
pts = get_pareto_undominated_by(pts, pareto)
return np.vstack(pareto_groups)
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# previous solutions
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
def is_pareto_efficient_dumb(costs):
"""
:param costs: An (n_points, n_costs) array
:return: A (n_points, ) boolean array, indicating whether each point is Pareto efficient
"""
is_efficient = np.ones(costs.shape[0], dtype = bool)
for i, c in enumerate(costs):
is_efficient[i] = np.all(np.any(costs>=c, axis=1))
return is_efficient
def is_pareto_efficient(costs):
"""
:param costs: An (n_points, n_costs) array
:return: A (n_points, ) boolean array, indicating whether each point is Pareto efficient
"""
is_efficient = np.ones(costs.shape[0], dtype = bool)
for i, c in enumerate(costs):
if is_efficient[i]:
is_efficient[is_efficient] = np.any(costs[is_efficient]<=c, axis=1) # Remove dominated points
return is_efficient
def dominates(row, rowCandidate):
return all(r >= rc for r, rc in zip(row, rowCandidate))
def cull(pts, dominates):
dominated = []
cleared = []
remaining = pts
while remaining:
candidate = remaining[0]
new_remaining = []
for other in remaining[1:]:
[new_remaining, dominated][dominates(candidate, other)].append(other)
if not any(dominates(other, candidate) for other in new_remaining):
cleared.append(candidate)
else:
dominated.append(candidate)
remaining = new_remaining
return cleared, dominated
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# benchmarking
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# to accomodate the original non-numpy solution
pts_list = [list(pt) for pt in pts]
import timeit
# print('Old non-numpy solution:s\t{}'.format(
# timeit.timeit('cull(pts_list, dominates)', number=3, globals=globals())))
print('Numpy solution:\t{}'.format(
timeit.timeit('is_pareto_efficient(pts)', number=3, globals=globals())))
print('Convex hull heuristic:\t{}'.format(
timeit.timeit('get_pareto_frontier(pts)', number=3, globals=globals())))
Results
# >>= python temp.py # 1,000 points
# Old non-numpy solution: 0.0316428339574486
# Numpy solution: 0.005961259012110531
# Convex hull heuristic: 0.012369581032544374
# >>= python temp.py # 1,000,000 points
# Old non-numpy solution: 70.67529802105855
# Numpy solution: 5.398462114972062
# Convex hull heuristic: 1.5286884519737214
# >>= python temp.py # 10,000,000 points
# Numpy solution: 98.03680767398328
# Convex hull heuristic: 10.203076395904645
Original Post
I took a shot at rewriting the same algorithm with a couple of tweaks. I think most of your problems come from inputPoints.remove(row)
. This requires searching through the list of points; removing by index would be much more efficient.
I also modified the dominates
function to avoid some redundant comparisons. This could be handy in a higher dimension.
def dominates(row, rowCandidate):
return all(r >= rc for r, rc in zip(row, rowCandidate))
def cull(pts, dominates):
dominated = []
cleared = []
remaining = pts
while remaining:
candidate = remaining[0]
new_remaining = []
for other in remaining[1:]:
[new_remaining, dominated][dominates(candidate, other)].append(other)
if not any(dominates(other, candidate) for other in new_remaining):
cleared.append(candidate)
else:
dominated.append(candidate)
remaining = new_remaining
return cleared, dominated