Book Image

Generative AI with Python and TensorFlow 2

By : Joseph Babcock, Raghav Bali
4 (1)
Book Image

Generative AI with Python and TensorFlow 2

4 (1)
By: Joseph Babcock, Raghav Bali

Overview of this book

Machines are excelling at creative human skills such as painting, writing, and composing music. Could you be more creative than generative AI? In this book, you’ll explore the evolution of generative models, from restricted Boltzmann machines and deep belief networks to VAEs and GANs. You’ll learn how to implement models yourself in TensorFlow and get to grips with the latest research on deep neural networks. There’s been an explosion in potential use cases for generative models. You’ll look at Open AI’s news generator, deepfakes, and training deep learning agents to navigate a simulated environment. Recreate the code that’s under the hood and uncover surprising links between text, image, and music generation.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
14
Other Books You May Enjoy
15
Index

Creating the network from TensorFlow 2

Now that we've downloaded the CIFAR-10 dataset, split it into test and training data, and reshaped and rescaled it, we are ready to start building our VAE model. We'll use the same Model API from the Keras module in TensorFlow 2. The TensorFlow documentation contains an example of how to implement a VAE using convolutional networks (https://www.tensorflow.org/tutorials/generative/cvae), and we'll build on this code example; however, for our purposes, we will implement simpler VAE networks using MLP layers based on the original VAE paper, Auto-Encoding Variational Bayes13, and show how we adapt the TensorFlow example to also allow for IAF modules in decoding.

In the original article, the authors propose two kinds of models for use in the VAE, both MLP feedforward networks: Gaussian and Bernoulli, with these names reflecting the probability distribution functions used in the MLP network outputs in their finals layers The Bernoulli...