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Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2

Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2

By : Benjamin Planche, Eliot Andres
3.3 (12)
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Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2

Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2

3.3 (12)
By: Benjamin Planche, Eliot Andres

Overview of this book

Computer vision solutions are becoming increasingly common, making their way into fields such as health, automobile, social media, and robotics. This book will help you explore TensorFlow 2, the brand new version of Google's open source framework for machine learning. You will understand how to benefit from using convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for visual tasks. Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2 starts with the fundamentals of computer vision and deep learning, teaching you how to build a neural network from scratch. You will discover the features that have made TensorFlow the most widely used AI library, along with its intuitive Keras interface. You'll then move on to building, training, and deploying CNNs efficiently. Complete with concrete code examples, the book demonstrates how to classify images with modern solutions, such as Inception and ResNet, and extract specific content using You Only Look Once (YOLO), Mask R-CNN, and U-Net. You will also build generative adversarial networks (GANs) and variational autoencoders (VAEs) to create and edit images, and long short-term memory networks (LSTMs) to analyze videos. In the process, you will acquire advanced insights into transfer learning, data augmentation, domain adaptation, and mobile and web deployment, among other key concepts. By the end of the book, you will have both the theoretical understanding and practical skills to solve advanced computer vision problems with TensorFlow 2.0.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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1
Section 1: TensorFlow 2 and Deep Learning Applied to Computer Vision
2
Computer Vision and Neural Networks
5
Section 2: State-of-the-Art Solutions for Classic Recognition Problems
6
Influential Classification Tools
9
Section 3: Advanced Concepts and New Frontiers of Computer Vision
10
Training on Complex and Scarce Datasets

Introducing CNNs

CNNs offer simple solutions to these shortcomings. While they work the same way as the networks we introduced previously (such as feed-forward and backpropagation), some clever changes were brought to their architecture.

First of all, CNNs can handle multidimensional data. For images, a CNN takes as input three-dimensional data (height × width × depth) and has its own neurons arranged in a similar volume (refer to Figure 3.1). This leads to the second novelty of CNNs—unlike fully connected networks, where neurons are connected to all elements from the previous layer, each neuron in CNNs only has access to some elements in the neighboring region of the previous layer. This region (usually square and spanning all channels) is called the receptive field of the neurons (or the filter size):

Figure 3.1: CNN representation, showing the receptive fields of the top-left neurons from the first layer to the last (further explanations can be found...
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