Book Image

Hands-On Artificial Intelligence for Beginners

By : Patrick D. Smith, David Dindi
Book Image

Hands-On Artificial Intelligence for Beginners

By: Patrick D. Smith, David Dindi

Overview of this book

Virtual Assistants, such as Alexa and Siri, process our requests, Google's cars have started to read addresses, and Amazon's prices and Netflix's recommended videos are decided by AI. Artificial Intelligence is one of the most exciting technologies and is becoming increasingly significant in the modern world. Hands-On Artificial Intelligence for Beginners will teach you what Artificial Intelligence is and how to design and build intelligent applications. This book will teach you to harness packages such as TensorFlow in order to create powerful AI systems. You will begin with reviewing the recent changes in AI and learning how artificial neural networks (ANNs) have enabled more intelligent AI. You'll explore feedforward, recurrent, convolutional, and generative neural networks (FFNNs, RNNs, CNNs, and GNNs), as well as reinforcement learning methods. In the concluding chapters, you'll learn how to implement these methods for a variety of tasks, such as generating text for chatbots, and playing board and video games. By the end of this book, you will be able to understand exactly what you need to consider when optimizing ANNs and how to deploy and maintain AI applications.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

The building blocks of RNNs

When we think about how a human thinks, we don't just observe a situation once; we constantly update what we're thinking based on the context of the situation. Think about reading a book: each chapter is an amalgamation of words that make up its meaning. Vanilla feedforward networks don't take sequences as inputs, and so it becomes very difficult to model unstructured data such as natural language. RNNs can help us achieve this.

Basic structure

RNNs differ from other networks in the fact that they have a recursive structure; they are recurring over time. RNNs utilize recursive loops, which allow information to persist within the network. We can think of them as multiple copies of...