All of the (other current) responses are incorrect in some way as the question is about adding regularization to activation. This one is closest in that it suggests summing the norms of the outputs, which is correct, but the code sums the norms of the weights, which is incorrect.
The correct way is not to modify the network code, but rather to capture the outputs via a forward hook, as in the OutputHook
class. From there, the summing of the norms of the outputs is straightforward, but one needs to take care to clear the captured outputs every iteration.
import torch
class OutputHook(list):
""" Hook to capture module outputs.
"""
def __call__(self, module, input, output):
self.append(output)
class MLP(torch.nn.Module):
def __init__(self):
super(MLP, self).__init__()
self.linear1 = torch.nn.Linear(128, 32)
self.linear2 = torch.nn.Linear(32, 16)
self.linear3 = torch.nn.Linear(16, 2)
# Instantiate ReLU, so a hook can be registered to capture its output.
self.relu = torch.nn.ReLU()
def forward(self, x):
layer1_out = self.relu(self.linear1(x))
layer2_out = self.relu(self.linear2(layer1_out))
out = self.linear3(layer2_out)
return out
batch_size = 4
l1_lambda = 0.01
model = MLP()
optimizer = torch.optim.SGD(model.parameters(), lr=1e-4)
# Register hook to capture the ReLU outputs. Non-trivial networks will often
# require hooks to be applied more judiciously.
output_hook = OutputHook()
model.relu.register_forward_hook(output_hook)
inputs = torch.rand(batch_size, 128)
targets = torch.ones(batch_size).long()
optimizer.zero_grad()
outputs = model(inputs)
cross_entropy_loss = torch.nn.functional.cross_entropy(outputs, targets)
# Compute the L1 penalty over the ReLU outputs captured by the hook.
l1_penalty = 0.
for output in output_hook:
l1_penalty += torch.norm(output, 1)
l1_penalty *= l1_lambda
loss = cross_entropy_loss + l1_penalty
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
output_hook.clear()