Book Image

Python Deep Learning - Third Edition

By : Ivan Vasilev
4 (1)
Book Image

Python Deep Learning - Third Edition

4 (1)
By: Ivan Vasilev

Overview of this book

The field of deep learning has developed rapidly recently and today covers a broad range of applications. This makes it challenging to navigate and hard to understand without solid foundations. This book will guide you from the basics of neural networks to the state-of-the-art large language models in use today. The first part of the book introduces the main machine learning concepts and paradigms. It covers the mathematical foundations, the structure, and the training algorithms of neural networks and dives into the essence of deep learning. The second part of the book introduces convolutional networks for computer vision. We’ll learn how to solve image classification, object detection, instance segmentation, and image generation tasks. The third part focuses on the attention mechanism and transformers – the core network architecture of large language models. We’ll discuss new types of advanced tasks they can solve, such as chatbots and text-to-image generation. By the end of this book, you’ll have a thorough understanding of the inner workings of deep neural networks. You'll have the ability to develop new models and adapt existing ones to solve your tasks. You’ll also have sufficient understanding to continue your research and stay up to date with the latest advancements in the field.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1:Introduction to Neural Networks
5
Part 2: Deep Neural Networks for Computer Vision
8
Part 3: Natural Language Processing and Transformers
13
Part 4: Developing and Deploying Deep Neural Networks

Fundamental DL concepts

In 1801, Joseph Marie Charles invented the Jacquard loom. Charles was not a scientist, but simply a merchant. The Jacquard loom used a set of punched cards, where each card represented a pattern to be reproduced on the loom. At the same time, each card was an abstract representation of that pattern. Punched cards have been used, for example, in the tabulating machine invented by Herman Hollerith in 1890, or in the first computers as a means to input code. In the tabulating machine, the cards were simply abstractions of samples to be fed into the machine to calculate statistics on a population. But in the Jacquard loom, their use was subtler, and each card represented the abstraction of a pattern that could be combined with others to create more complex patterns. The punched card is an abstract representation of a feature of reality, the final weaved design.

In a way, the Jacquard loom sowed the seeds of what DL is today, the definition of reality through...