Book Image

Deep Learning Quick Reference

By : Mike Bernico
Book Image

Deep Learning Quick Reference

By: Mike Bernico

Overview of this book

Deep learning has become an essential necessity to enter the world of artificial intelligence. With this book deep learning techniques will become more accessible, practical, and relevant to practicing data scientists. It moves deep learning from academia to the real world through practical examples. You will learn how Tensor Board is used to monitor the training of deep neural networks and solve binary classification problems using deep learning. Readers will then learn to optimize hyperparameters in their deep learning models. The book then takes the readers through the practical implementation of training CNN's, RNN's, and LSTM's with word embeddings and seq2seq models from scratch. Later the book explores advanced topics such as Deep Q Network to solve an autonomous agent problem and how to use two adversarial networks to generate artificial images that appear real. For implementation purposes, we look at popular Python-based deep learning frameworks such as Keras and Tensorflow, Each chapter provides best practices and safe choices to help readers make the right decision while training deep neural networks. By the end of this book, you will be able to solve real-world problems quickly with deep neural networks.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Word embedding

Bag of Word models have a few less than ideal properties that are worth noting.

The first problem with the Bag of Word models we've previously looked at is that they don't consider the context of the word. They don't really consider the relationships that exist between the words in the document.

A second but related concern is that the assignment of words in the vector space is somewhat arbitrary. Information that might exist about the relation between two words in a corpus vocabulary might not be captured. For example, a model that has learned to process the word alligator can leverage very little of that learning when it comes across the word crocodile, even though both alligators and crocodiles are somewhat similar creatures that share many characteristics (bring on the herpetologist hate mail).

Lastly, because the vocabulary of a corpus can be...