Book Image

Machine Learning Algorithms

Book Image

Machine Learning Algorithms

Overview of this book

In this book, you will learn all the important machine learning algorithms that are commonly used in the field of data science. These algorithms can be used for supervised as well as unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning, and semi-supervised learning. The algorithms that are covered in this book are linear regression, logistic regression, SVM, naïve Bayes, k-means, random forest, TensorFlow and feature engineering. In this book, you will how to use these algorithms to resolve your problems, and how they work. This book will also introduce you to natural language processing and recommendation systems, which help you to run multiple algorithms simultaneously. On completion of the book, you will know how to pick the right machine learning algorithm for clustering, classification, or regression for your problem
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

A brief introduction to TensorFlow


TensorFlow is a computational framework created by Google and has become one of the most diffused deep-learning toolkits. It can work with both CPUs and GPUs and already implements most of the operations and structures required to build and train a complex model. TensorFlow can be installed as a Python package on Linux, Mac, and Windows (with or without GPU support); however, I suggest you follow the instructions provided on the website (the link can be found in the infobox at the end of this chapter) to avoid common mistakes.

The main concept behind TensorFlow is the computational graph, or a set of subsequent operations that transform an input batch into the desired output. In the following figure, there's a schematic representation of a graph:

Starting from the bottom, we have two input nodes (a and b), a transpose operation (that works on b), a matrix multiplication and a mean reduction. The init block is a separate operation, which is formally part of...