Returns the median of the values in input
.
Note
The median is not unique for input
tensors with an even number of elements. In this case the lower of the two medians is returned. To compute the mean of both medians, use torch.quantile()
with q=0.5
instead.
Warning
This function produces deterministic (sub)gradients unlike median(dim=0)
input (Tensor) – the input tensor.
Example:
>>> a = torch.randn(1, 3) >>> a tensor([[ 1.5219, -1.5212, 0.2202]]) >>> torch.median(a) tensor(0.2202)
Returns a namedtuple (values, indices)
where values
contains the median of each row of input
in the dimension dim
, and indices
contains the index of the median values found in the dimension dim
.
By default, dim
is the last dimension of the input
tensor.
If keepdim
is True
, the output tensors are of the same size as input
except in the dimension dim
where they are of size 1. Otherwise, dim
is squeezed (see torch.squeeze()
), resulting in the outputs tensor having 1 fewer dimension than input
.
Note
The median is not unique for input
tensors with an even number of elements in the dimension dim
. In this case the lower of the two medians is returned. To compute the mean of both medians in input
, use torch.quantile()
with q=0.5
instead.
Warning
indices
does not necessarily contain the first occurrence of each median value found, unless it is unique. The exact implementation details are device-specific. Do not expect the same result when run on CPU and GPU in general. For the same reason do not expect the gradients to be deterministic.
out ((Tensor, Tensor), optional) – The first tensor will be populated with the median values and the second tensor, which must have dtype long, with their indices in the dimension dim
of input
.
Example:
>>> a = torch.randn(4, 5) >>> a tensor([[ 0.2505, -0.3982, -0.9948, 0.3518, -1.3131], [ 0.3180, -0.6993, 1.0436, 0.0438, 0.2270], [-0.2751, 0.7303, 0.2192, 0.3321, 0.2488], [ 1.0778, -1.9510, 0.7048, 0.4742, -0.7125]]) >>> torch.median(a, 1) torch.return_types.median(values=tensor([-0.3982, 0.2270, 0.2488, 0.4742]), indices=tensor([1, 4, 4, 3]))
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