Book Image

Mastering PyTorch - Second Edition

By : Ashish Ranjan Jha
4 (1)
Book Image

Mastering PyTorch - Second Edition

4 (1)
By: Ashish Ranjan Jha

Overview of this book

PyTorch is making it easier than ever before for anyone to build deep learning applications. This PyTorch deep learning book will help you uncover expert techniques to get the most out of your data and build complex neural network models. You’ll build convolutional neural networks for image classification and recurrent neural networks and transformers for sentiment analysis. As you advance, you'll apply deep learning across different domains, such as music, text, and image generation, using generative models, including diffusion models. You'll not only build and train your own deep reinforcement learning models in PyTorch but also learn to optimize model training using multiple CPUs, GPUs, and mixed-precision training. You’ll deploy PyTorch models to production, including mobile devices. Finally, you’ll discover the PyTorch ecosystem and its rich set of libraries. These libraries will add another set of tools to your deep learning toolbelt, teaching you how to use fastai to prototype models and PyTorch Lightning to train models. You’ll discover libraries for AutoML and explainable AI (XAI), create recommendation systems, and build language and vision transformers with Hugging Face. By the end of this book, you'll be able to perform complex deep learning tasks using PyTorch to build smart artificial intelligence models.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
20
Index

Evolution of CNN architectures

CNNs have been in existence since 1989, when the first multilayered CNN, called ConvNet, was developed by Yann LeCun. This model could perform visual cognition tasks such as identifying handwritten digits. In 1998, LeCun developed an improved ConvNet model called LeNet. Due to its high accuracy in optical recognition tasks, LeNet was adopted for industrial use soon after its invention. Ever since, CNNs have been one of the most successful machine learning models, both in industry as well as academia. The following diagram shows a brief timeline of architectural developments in the lifetime of CNNs, starting from 1989 all the way to 2020:

Figure 3.5 – CNN architecture evolution – a broad picture

As we can see, there is a significant gap between the years 1998 and 2012. This was primarily because there wasn't a dataset big and suitable enough to demonstrate the capabilities of CNNs, especially deep CNNs. And on the existing small datasets...