Book Image

Hands-On Deep Learning with R

By : Michael Pawlus, Rodger Devine
Book Image

Hands-On Deep Learning with R

By: Michael Pawlus, Rodger Devine

Overview of this book

Deep learning enables efficient and accurate learning from a massive amount of data. This book will help you overcome a number of challenges using various deep learning algorithms and architectures with R programming. This book starts with a brief overview of machine learning and deep learning and how to build your first neural network. You’ll understand the architecture of various deep learning algorithms and their applicable fields, learn how to build deep learning models, optimize hyperparameters, and evaluate model performance. Various deep learning applications in image processing, natural language processing (NLP), recommendation systems, and predictive analytics will also be covered. Later chapters will show you how to tackle recognition problems such as image recognition and signal detection, programmatically summarize documents, conduct topic modeling, and forecast stock market prices. Toward the end of the book, you will learn the common applications of GANs and how to build a face generation model using them. Finally, you’ll get to grips with using reinforcement learning and deep reinforcement learning to solve various real-world problems. By the end of this deep learning book, you will be able to build and deploy your own deep learning applications using appropriate frameworks and algorithms.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Deep Learning Basics
5
Section 2: Deep Learning Applications
12
Section 3: Reinforcement Learning

CNNs for Image Recognition

In this chapter, you will learn to use convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for image recognition. Convolutional neural networks are a variation of neural networks that are particularly well-suited to image recognition because they take into account the relationship between data points in space.

We will cover how convolutional neural networks differ from the basic feedforward, fully connected neural network that we created in the last chapter. The main difference is that the hidden layers in a CNN are not all fully connected dense layers—CNNs include a number of special layers. One of these is the convolutional layer, which convolves a filter around the image space. The other special layer is a pooling layer, which reduces the size of the input and only persists particular values. We will go into more depth on these layers later in the chapter...