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Neural Network Projects with Python

Neural Network Projects with Python

By : James Loy
4.6 (15)
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Neural Network Projects with Python

Neural Network Projects with Python

4.6 (15)
By: James Loy

Overview of this book

Neural networks are at the core of recent AI advances, providing some of the best resolutions to many real-world problems, including image recognition, medical diagnosis, text analysis, and more. This book goes through some basic neural network and deep learning concepts, as well as some popular libraries in Python for implementing them. It contains practical demonstrations of neural networks in domains such as fare prediction, image classification, sentiment analysis, and more. In each case, the book provides a problem statement, the specific neural network architecture required to tackle that problem, the reasoning behind the algorithm used, and the associated Python code to implement the solution from scratch. In the process, you will gain hands-on experience with using popular Python libraries such as Keras to build and train your own neural networks from scratch. By the end of this book, you will have mastered the different neural network architectures and created cutting-edge AI projects in Python that will immediately strengthen your machine learning portfolio.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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Representing words as vectors

So far, we have looked at what RNNs and LSTM networks represent. There remains an important question we need to address: how do we represent words as input data for our neural network? In the case of CNNs, we saw how images are essentially three-dimensional vectors/matrixes, with dimensions represented by the image width, height, and the number of channels (three channels for color images). The values in the vectors represent the intensity of each individual pixel.

One-hot encoding

How do we create a similar vector/matrix for words so that they can be used as input to our neural network? In earlier chapters, we saw how categorical variables such as the day of week can be one-hot encoded to numerical...

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