Book Image

Mastering Machine Learning Algorithms - Second Edition

By : Giuseppe Bonaccorso
Book Image

Mastering Machine Learning Algorithms - Second Edition

By: Giuseppe Bonaccorso

Overview of this book

Mastering Machine Learning Algorithms, Second Edition helps you harness the real power of machine learning algorithms in order to implement smarter ways of meeting today's overwhelming data needs. This newly updated and revised guide will help you master algorithms used widely in semi-supervised learning, reinforcement learning, supervised learning, and unsupervised learning domains. You will use all the modern libraries from the Python ecosystem – including NumPy and Keras – to extract features from varied complexities of data. Ranging from Bayesian models to the Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm to Hidden Markov models, this machine learning book teaches you how to extract features from your dataset, perform complex dimensionality reduction, and train supervised and semi-supervised models by making use of Python-based libraries such as scikit-learn. You will also discover practical applications for complex techniques such as maximum likelihood estimation, Hebbian learning, and ensemble learning, and how to use TensorFlow 2.x to train effective deep neural networks. By the end of this book, you will be ready to implement and solve end-to-end machine learning problems and use case scenarios.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
26
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Index

Semi-supervised Support Vector Machines (S3VM)

When we discussed the cluster assumption in the previous chapter, we also defined the low-density regions as boundaries and the corresponding problem as low-density separation. A common supervised classifier based on this concept is a Support Vector Machine (SVM), the objective of which is to maximize the distance between the dense regions where the samples must be.

S3VM Theory

For a complete description of linear and kernel-based SVMs, please refer to Bonaccorso G., Machine Learning Algorithms, Second Edition, Packt Publishing, 2018. However, it's useful to remind yourself of the basic model for a linear SVM with slack variables :

This model is based on the assumption that yi can be either -1 or 1. The slack variables or soft-margins are variables, one for each sample, introduced to reduce the strength imposed by the original condition (min ||w||), which is based on a hard margin that misclassifies...