Book Image

Machine Learning for Developers

By : Rodolfo Bonnin, Md Mahmudul Hasan
Book Image

Machine Learning for Developers

By: Rodolfo Bonnin, Md Mahmudul Hasan

Overview of this book

Most of us have heard about the term Machine Learning, but surprisingly the question frequently asked by developers across the globe is, “How do I get started in Machine Learning?”. One reason could be attributed to the vastness of the subject area because people often get overwhelmed by the abstractness of ML and terms such as regression, supervised learning, probability density function, and so on. This book is a systematic guide teaching you how to implement various Machine Learning techniques and their day-to-day application and development. You will start with the very basics of data and mathematical models in easy-to-follow language that you are familiar with; you will feel at home while implementing the examples. The book will introduce you to various libraries and frameworks used in the world of Machine Learning, and then, without wasting any time, you will get to the point and implement Regression, Clustering, classification, Neural networks, and more with fun examples. As you get to grips with the techniques, you’ll learn to implement those concepts to solve real-world scenarios for ML applications such as image analysis, Natural Language processing, and anomaly detections of time series data. By the end of the book, you will have learned various ML techniques to develop more efficient and intelligent applications.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Model fitting and evaluation

In this part of the machine learning process, we have the model and data ready, and we proceed to train and validate our model.

Dataset partitioning

At the time of training the models, we usually partition all the provided data into three sets: the training set, which will actually be used to adjust the parameters of the models; the validation set, which will be used to compare alternative models applied to that data (it can be ignored if we have just one model and architecture in mind); and the test set, which will be used to measure the accuracy of the chosen model. The proportions of these partitions are normally 70/20/10.

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