Abstract

There is a growing interest among quantitative geneticists and animal breeders in the use of deep learning (DL) for genomic prediction. However, the performance of DL is affected by hyperparameters that are typically manually set by users. These hyperparameters do not simply specify the architecture of the model; they are also critical for the efficacy of the optimization and model-fitting process. To date, most DL approaches used for genomic prediction have concentrated on identifying suitable hyperparameters by exploring discrete options from a subset of the hyperparameter space. Enlarging the hyperparameter optimization search space with continuous hyperparameters is a daunting combinatorial problem. To deal with this problem, we propose using differential evolution (DE) to perform an efficient search of arbitrarily complex hyperparameter spaces in DL models, and we apply this to the specific case of genomic prediction of livestock phenotypes. This approach was evaluated on two pig and cattle datasets with real genotypes and simulated phenotypes (N = 7,539 animals and M = 48,541 markers) and one real dataset (N = 910 individuals and M = 28,916 markers). Hyperparameters were evaluated using cross-validation. We compared the predictive performance of DL models using hyperparameters optimized by DE against DL models with “best practice” hyperparameters selected from published studies and baseline DL models with randomly specified hyperparameters. Optimized models using DE showed a clear improvement in predictive performance across all three datasets. DE optimized hyperparameters also resulted in DL models with less overfitting and less variation in predictive performance over repeated retraining compared to non-optimized DL models.

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