Book Image

Mastering Azure Machine Learning

By : Christoph Körner, Kaijisse Waaijer
Book Image

Mastering Azure Machine Learning

By: Christoph Körner, Kaijisse Waaijer

Overview of this book

The increase being seen in data volume today requires distributed systems, powerful algorithms, and scalable cloud infrastructure to compute insights and train and deploy machine learning (ML) models. This book will help you improve your knowledge of building ML models using Azure and end-to-end ML pipelines on the cloud. The book starts with an overview of an end-to-end ML project and a guide on how to choose the right Azure service for different ML tasks. It then focuses on Azure Machine Learning and takes you through the process of data experimentation, data preparation, and feature engineering using Azure Machine Learning and Python. You'll learn advanced feature extraction techniques using natural language processing (NLP), classical ML techniques, and the secrets of both a great recommendation engine and a performant computer vision model using deep learning methods. You'll also explore how to train, optimize, and tune models using Azure Automated Machine Learning and HyperDrive, and perform distributed training on Azure. Then, you'll learn different deployment and monitoring techniques using Azure Kubernetes Services with Azure Machine Learning, along with the basics of MLOps—DevOps for ML to automate your ML process as CI/CD pipeline. By the end of this book, you'll have mastered Azure Machine Learning and be able to confidently design, build and operate scalable ML pipelines in Azure.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Azure Machine Learning
4
Section 2: Experimentation and Data Preparation
9
Section 3: Training Machine Learning Models
15
Section 4: Optimization and Deployment of Machine Learning Models
19
Index

Collaborative filtering—a rating-based recommendation engine

By recommending only similar items or items from similar users, your users might get bored of the recommendations provided due to the lack of diversity and variety. Once a user starts interacting with a service, for example, watching videos on YouTube, reading and liking posts on Facebook, or rating movies on Netflix, we want to provide them with great personalized recommendations and relevant content to keep them happy and engaged. A great way to do so is to provide a good mix of similar content and new content to explore and discover.

Collaborative filtering is a popular approach for providing such diverse recommendations by comparing user-item interactions, finding other users who interact with similar items, and recommending items that those users also interacted with. It's almost as if you were to build many custom stereotypes and recommend other items consumed from the same stereotype. Figure 11.6 illustrates...