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Hands-On Machine Learning on Google Cloud Platform

You're reading from   Hands-On Machine Learning on Google Cloud Platform Implementing smart and efficient analytics using Cloud ML Engine

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788393485
Length 500 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Alexis Perrier Alexis Perrier
Author Profile Icon Alexis Perrier
Alexis Perrier
V Kishore Ayyadevara V Kishore Ayyadevara
Author Profile Icon V Kishore Ayyadevara
V Kishore Ayyadevara
Giuseppe Ciaburro Giuseppe Ciaburro
Author Profile Icon Giuseppe Ciaburro
Giuseppe Ciaburro
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing the Google Cloud Platform FREE CHAPTER 2. Google Compute Engine 3. Google Cloud Storage 4. Querying Your Data with BigQuery 5. Transforming Your Data 6. Essential Machine Learning 7. Google Machine Learning APIs 8. Creating ML Applications with Firebase 9. Neural Networks with TensorFlow and Keras 10. Evaluating Results with TensorBoard 11. Optimizing the Model through Hyperparameter Tuning 12. Preventing Overfitting with Regularization 13. Beyond Feedforward Networks – CNN and RNN 14. Time Series with LSTMs 15. Reinforcement Learning 16. Generative Neural Networks 17. Chatbots

Intuition of over/under fitting

Before we understand about how the preceding techniques are useful, let's build a scenario, so that we understand the phenomenon of overfitting.

Scenario 1: A case of not generalizing on an unseen dataset

In this scenario, we will create a dataset, for which there is a clear linearly separable mapping between input and output. For example, whenever the independent variables are positive, the output is [1,0], and when the input variables are negative, the output is [0,1]:

To that dataset, we will add a small amount of noise (10% of the preceding dataset created) by adding some data points that follow the opposite of the preceding pattern, that is, when the input variables are positive, the output is [0,1], and the output is [1,0] when the input variables are negative:

Appending the datasets obtained by the preceding two steps gives us the...

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