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Deep Learning for Beginners

Deep Learning for Beginners

By : Pablo Rivas, Rivas
4.3 (3)
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Deep Learning for Beginners

Deep Learning for Beginners

4.3 (3)
By: Pablo Rivas, Rivas

Overview of this book

With information on the web exponentially increasing, it has become more difficult than ever to navigate through everything to find reliable content that will help you get started with deep learning. This book is designed to help you if you're a beginner looking to work on deep learning and build deep learning models from scratch, and you already have the basic mathematical and programming knowledge required to get started. The book begins with a basic overview of machine learning, guiding you through setting up popular Python frameworks. You will also understand how to prepare data by cleaning and preprocessing it for deep learning, and gradually go on to explore neural networks. A dedicated section will give you insights into the working of neural networks by helping you get hands-on with training single and multiple layers of neurons. Later, you will cover popular neural network architectures such as CNNs, RNNs, AEs, VAEs, and GANs with the help of simple examples, and learn how to build models from scratch. At the end of each chapter, you will find a question and answer section to help you test what you've learned through the course of the book. By the end of this book, you'll be well-versed with deep learning concepts and have the knowledge you need to use specific algorithms with various tools for different tasks.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Getting Up to Speed
8
Section 2: Unsupervised Deep Learning
13
Section 3: Supervised Deep Learning

Questions and answers

  1. Is overfitting a bad thing for an autoencoder?

Actually, no. You want the autoencoder to overfit! That is, you want it to exactly replicate the input data in the output. However, there is a caveat. Your dataset must be really large in comparison to the size of the model; otherwise, the memorization of the data will prevent the model from generalizing to unseen data.

  1. Why did we use two neurons in the encoder's last layer?

For visualization purposes only. The two-dimensional latent space produced by the two neurons allows us to easily visualize the data in the latent space. In the next chapter, we will use other configurations that do not necessarily have a two-dimensional latent space.

  1. What is so cool about autoencoders again?

They are simple neural models that learn without a teacher (unsupervised). They are not biased toward learning specific labels (classes). They learn about the world of data through iterative observations, aiming to learn the...

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