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Deep Reinforcement Learning with Python

You're reading from   Deep Reinforcement Learning with Python Master classic RL, deep RL, distributional RL, inverse RL, and more with OpenAI Gym and TensorFlow

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839210686
Length 760 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Sudharsan Ravichandiran Sudharsan Ravichandiran
Author Profile Icon Sudharsan Ravichandiran
Sudharsan Ravichandiran
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Fundamentals of Reinforcement Learning 2. A Guide to the Gym Toolkit FREE CHAPTER 3. The Bellman Equation and Dynamic Programming 4. Monte Carlo Methods 5. Understanding Temporal Difference Learning 6. Case Study – The MAB Problem 7. Deep Learning Foundations 8. A Primer on TensorFlow 9. Deep Q Network and Its Variants 10. Policy Gradient Method 11. Actor-Critic Methods – A2C and A3C 12. Learning DDPG, TD3, and SAC 13. TRPO, PPO, and ACKTR Methods 14. Distributional Reinforcement Learning 15. Imitation Learning and Inverse RL 16. Deep Reinforcement Learning with Stable Baselines 17. Reinforcement Learning Frontiers 18. Other Books You May Enjoy
19. Index
Appendix 1 – Reinforcement Learning Algorithms 1. Appendix 2 – Assessments

ANN and its layers

While neurons are really cool, we cannot just use a single neuron to perform complex tasks. This is the reason our brain has billions of neurons, stacked in layers, forming a network. Similarly, artificial neurons are arranged in layers. Each and every layer will be connected in such a way that information is passed from one layer to another.

A typical ANN consists of the following layers:

  • Input layer
  • Hidden layer
  • Output layer

Each layer has a collection of neurons, and the neurons in one layer interact with all the neurons in the other layers. However, neurons in the same layer will not interact with one another. This is simply because neurons from the adjacent layers have connections or edges between them; however, neurons in the same layer do not have any connections. We use the term nodes or units to represent the neurons in the ANN.

Figure 7.3 shows a typical ANN:

Figure 7.3: ANN

Input layer

The...

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