Book Image

Python: Advanced Guide to Artificial Intelligence

By : Giuseppe Bonaccorso, Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani
Book Image

Python: Advanced Guide to Artificial Intelligence

By: Giuseppe Bonaccorso, Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani

Overview of this book

This Learning Path is your complete guide to quickly getting to grips with popular machine learning algorithms. You'll be introduced to the most widely used algorithms in supervised, unsupervised, and semi-supervised machine learning, and learn how to use them in the best possible manner. Ranging from Bayesian models to the MCMC algorithm to Hidden Markov models, this Learning Path will teach you how to extract features from your dataset and perform dimensionality reduction by making use of Python-based libraries. You'll bring the use of TensorFlow and Keras to build deep learning models, using concepts such as transfer learning, generative adversarial networks, and deep reinforcement learning. Next, you'll learn the advanced features of TensorFlow1.x, such as distributed TensorFlow with TF clusters, deploy production models with TensorFlow Serving. You'll implement different techniques related to object classification, object detection, image segmentation, and more. By the end of this Learning Path, you'll have obtained in-depth knowledge of TensorFlow, making you the go-to person for solving artificial intelligence problems This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: • Mastering Machine Learning Algorithms by Giuseppe Bonaccorso • Mastering TensorFlow 1.x by Armando Fandango • Deep Learning for Computer Vision by Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani
Table of Contents (31 chapters)
Title Page
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
19
Tensor Processing Units
Index

Transfer learning


We have discussed how deep learning is fundamentally based on gray-box models that learn how to associate input patterns to specific classification/regression outcomes. All the processing pipeline that is often employed to prepare the data for specific detections is absorbed by the complexity of the neural architecture. However, the price to pay for high accuracies is a proportionally large number of training samples. State-of-the-art visual networks are trained with millions of images and, obviously, each of them must be properly labeled. Even if there are many free datasets that can be employed to train several models, many specific scenarios need hard preparatory work that sometimes is very difficult to achieve.

Luckily, deep neural architectures are hierarchical models that learn in a structured way. As we have seen in the examples of deep convolutional networks, the first layers become more and more sensitive to detect low-level features, while the higher ones concentrate...