Book Image

Deep Learning with PyTorch Lightning

By : Kunal Sawarkar
3.5 (2)
Book Image

Deep Learning with PyTorch Lightning

3.5 (2)
By: Kunal Sawarkar

Overview of this book

Building and implementing deep learning (DL) is becoming a key skill for those who want to be at the forefront of progress.But with so much information and complex study materials out there, getting started with DL can feel quite overwhelming. Written by an AI thought leader, Deep Learning with PyTorch Lightning helps researchers build their first DL models quickly and easily without getting stuck on the complexities. With its help, you’ll be able to maximize productivity for DL projects while ensuring full flexibility – from model formulation to implementation. Throughout this book, you’ll learn how to configure PyTorch Lightning on a cloud platform, understand the architectural components, and explore how they are configured to build various industry solutions. You’ll build a neural network architecture, deploy an application from scratch, and see how you can expand it based on your specific needs, beyond what the framework can provide. In the later chapters, you’ll also learn how to implement capabilities to build and train various models like Convolutional Neural Nets (CNN), Natural Language Processing (NLP), Time Series, Self-Supervised Learning, Semi-Supervised Learning, Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) using PyTorch Lightning. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to build and deploy DL models with confidence.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: Kickstarting with PyTorch Lightning
6
Section 2: Solving using PyTorch Lightning
11
Section 3: Advanced Topics

Chapter 8: Self-Supervised Learning

Since the dawn of Machine Learning, the field has been neatly divided into two camps: supervised learning and unsupervised learning. In supervised learning, there should be a labeled dataset available, and if that is not the case, then the only option left is unsupervised learning. While unsupervised learning may sound great as it can work without labels, in practice, the applications of unsupervised methods such as clustering are quite limited. There is also no easy option to evaluate the accuracy of unsupervised methods or to deploy them.

The most practical Machine Learning applications tend to be supervised learning applications (for example, recognizing objects in images, predicting future stock prices or sales, or recommending the right movie to you on Netflix). The trade-off for supervised learning is the necessity for well-curated and high-quality trustworthy labels. Most datasets are not born with labels and getting such labels can be...