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Python Deep Learning

Python Deep Learning

By : Zocca, Spacagna, Daniel Slater, Roelants
4.1 (10)
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Python Deep Learning

Python Deep Learning

4.1 (10)
By: Zocca, Spacagna, Daniel Slater, Roelants

Overview of this book

With an increasing interest in AI around the world, deep learning has attracted a great deal of public attention. Every day, deep learning algorithms are used broadly across different industries. The book will give you all the practical information available on the subject, including the best practices, using real-world use cases. You will learn to recognize and extract information to increase predictive accuracy and optimize results. Starting with a quick recap of important machine learning concepts, the book will delve straight into deep learning principles using Sci-kit learn. Moving ahead, you will learn to use the latest open source libraries such as Theano, Keras, Google's TensorFlow, and H20. Use this guide to uncover the difficulties of pattern recognition, scaling data with greater accuracy and discussing deep learning algorithms and techniques. Whether you want to dive deeper into Deep Learning, or want to investigate how to get more out of this powerful technology, you’ll find everything inside.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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11
Index

Pooling layers


In the previous section, we have derived the formula for the size for each slice in a convolutional layer. As we discussed, one of the advantages of convolutional layers is that they reduce the number of parameters needed, improving performance and reducing over-fitting. After a convolutional operation, another operation is often performed—pooling. The most classical example is called max-pooling, and this means creating (2 x 2) grids on each slice, and picking the neuron with the maximum activation value in each grid, discarding the rest. It is immediate that such an operation discards 75% of the neurons, keeping only the neurons that contribute the most in each cell.

There are two parameters for each pooling layer, similar to the stride and padding parameters found in convolutional layers, and they are the size of the cell and the stride. One typical choice is to choose a cell size of 2 and a stride of 2, though it is not uncommon to pick a cell size of 3 and a stride of...

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