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TensorFlow 2.0 Computer Vision Cookbook

You're reading from   TensorFlow 2.0 Computer Vision Cookbook Implement machine learning solutions to overcome various computer vision challenges

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838829131
Length 542 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jesús Martínez Jesús Martínez
Author Profile Icon Jesús Martínez
Jesús Martínez
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started with TensorFlow 2.x for Computer Vision 2. Chapter 2: Performing Image Classification FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Harnessing the Power of Pre-Trained Networks with Transfer Learning 4. Chapter 4: Enhancing and Styling Images with DeepDream, Neural Style Transfer, and Image Super-Resolution 5. Chapter 5: Reducing Noise with Autoencoders 6. Chapter 6: Generative Models and Adversarial Attacks 7. Chapter 7: Captioning Images with CNNs and RNNs 8. Chapter 8: Fine-Grained Understanding of Images through Segmentation 9. Chapter 9: Localizing Elements in Images with Object Detection 10. Chapter 10: Applying the Power of Deep Learning to Videos 11. Chapter 11: Streamlining Network Implementation with AutoML 12. Chapter 12: Boosting Performance 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Implementing an image captioning network

An image captioning architecture is comprised of an encoder and a decoder. The encoder is a CNN (typically a pre-trained one), which converts input images into numeric vectors. These vectors are then passed, along with text sequences, to the decoder, which is an RNN, that will learn, based on these values, how to iteratively generate each word in the corresponding caption.

In this recipe, we'll implement an image captioner that's been trained on the Flickr8k dataset. We'll leverage the feature extractor we implemented in the Implementing a reusable image caption feature extractor recipe.

Let's begin, shall we?

Getting ready

The external dependencies we'll be using in this recipe are Pillow, nltk, and tqdm. You can install them all at once with the following command:

$> pip install Pillow nltk tqdm

We will use the Flickr8k dataset, which you can get from Kaggle: https://www.kaggle.com/adityajn105...

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