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Hands-On Neural Networks with Keras

Hands-On Neural Networks with Keras

By : Purkait
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Hands-On Neural Networks with Keras

Hands-On Neural Networks with Keras

By: Purkait

Overview of this book

Neural networks are used to solve a wide range of problems in different areas of AI and deep learning. Hands-On Neural Networks with Keras will start with teaching you about the core concepts of neural networks. You will delve into combining different neural network models and work with real-world use cases, including computer vision, natural language understanding, synthetic data generation, and many more. Moving on, you will become well versed with convolutional neural networks (CNNs), recurrent neural networks (RNNs), long short-term memory (LSTM) networks, autoencoders, and generative adversarial networks (GANs) using real-world training datasets. We will examine how to use CNNs for image recognition, how to use reinforcement learning agents, and many more. We will dive into the specific architectures of various networks and then implement each of them in a hands-on manner using industry-grade frameworks. By the end of this book, you will be highly familiar with all prominent deep learning models and frameworks, and the options you have when applying deep learning to real-world scenarios and embedding artificial intelligence as the core fabric of your organization.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Fundamentals of Neural Networks
5
Section 2: Advanced Neural Network Architectures
10
Section 3: Hybrid Model Architecture
13
Section 4: Road Ahead

Using functional API to design autoencoders

Just as we did in the previous example, we will refer to the functional API to construct our deep autoencoder. We will import the input and dense layers, as well as the model object that we will later use to initialize the network. We will also define the input dimension for our images (64 x 64 x 3 = 12,288), and an encoding dimension of 256, leaving us with a compression ratio of 48. This simply means that each image will be compressed by a factor of 48, before our network attempts to reconstruct it from the latent space:

from keras.layers import Input, Dense
from keras.models import Model

##Input dimension
input_dim=12288

##Encoding dimension for the latent space
encoding_dim=256

The compression factor can be a very important parameter to consider, as mapping the input to a very low dimensional space will result in too much information...

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