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Advanced Deep Learning with R

You're reading from   Advanced Deep Learning with R Become an expert at designing, building, and improving advanced neural network models using R

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789538779
Length 352 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Bharatendra Rai Bharatendra Rai
Author Profile Icon Bharatendra Rai
Bharatendra Rai
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Revisiting Deep Learning Basics
2. Revisiting Deep Learning Architecture and Techniques FREE CHAPTER 3. Section 2: Deep Learning for Prediction and Classification
4. Deep Neural Networks for Multi-Class Classification 5. Deep Neural Networks for Regression 6. Section 3: Deep Learning for Computer Vision
7. Image Classification and Recognition 8. Image Classification Using Convolutional Neural Networks 9. Applying Autoencoder Neural Networks Using Keras 10. Image Classification for Small Data Using Transfer Learning 11. Creating New Images Using Generative Adversarial Networks 12. Section 4: Deep Learning for Natural Language Processing
13. Deep Networks for Text Classification 14. Text Classification Using Recurrent Neural Networks 15. Text classification Using Long Short-Term Memory Network 16. Text Classification Using Convolutional Recurrent Neural Networks 17. Section 5: The Road Ahead
18. Tips, Tricks, and the Road Ahead 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Preparing text data for model building

We will continue to use IMDB movie review data that we used in the previous chapter on recurrent neural networks. This data is already available in a format where we can use it for developing deep network models with minimum need for data processing.

Let's take a look at the following code:

# IMDB data
library(keras)
imdb <- dataset_imdb(num_words = 500)
c(c(train_x, train_y), c(test_x, test_y)) %<-% imdb
train_x <- pad_sequences(train_x, maxlen = 200)
test_x <- pad_sequences(test_x, maxlen = 200)

The sequence of integers capturing train and test data is stored in train_x and test_x respectively. Similarly, train_y and test_y store labels capturing information about whether movie reviews are positive or negative. We have specified the number of most frequent words to be 500. For padding, we are using 200 as the maximum length...

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