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Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2

You're reading from   Hands-On Computer Vision with TensorFlow 2 Leverage deep learning to create powerful image processing apps with TensorFlow 2.0 and Keras

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788830645
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Eliot Andres Eliot Andres
Author Profile Icon Eliot Andres
Eliot Andres
Benjamin Planche Benjamin Planche
Author Profile Icon Benjamin Planche
Benjamin Planche
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: TensorFlow 2 and Deep Learning Applied to Computer Vision FREE CHAPTER
2. Computer Vision and Neural Networks 3. TensorFlow Basics and Training a Model 4. Modern Neural Networks 5. Section 2: State-of-the-Art Solutions for Classic Recognition Problems
6. Influential Classification Tools 7. Object Detection Models 8. Enhancing and Segmenting Images 9. Section 3: Advanced Concepts and New Frontiers of Computer Vision
10. Training on Complex and Scarce Datasets 11. Video and Recurrent Neural Networks 12. Optimizing Models and Deploying on Mobile Devices 13. Migrating from TensorFlow 1 to TensorFlow 2 14. Assessments 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing CNNs

CNNs offer simple solutions to these shortcomings. While they work the same way as the networks we introduced previously (such as feed-forward and backpropagation), some clever changes were brought to their architecture.

First of all, CNNs can handle multidimensional data. For images, a CNN takes as input three-dimensional data (height × width × depth) and has its own neurons arranged in a similar volume (refer to Figure 3.1). This leads to the second novelty of CNNs—unlike fully connected networks, where neurons are connected to all elements from the previous layer, each neuron in CNNs only has access to some elements in the neighboring region of the previous layer. This region (usually square and spanning all channels) is called the receptive field of the neurons (or the filter size):

Figure 3.1: CNN representation, showing the receptive fields of the top-left neurons from the first layer to the last (further explanations can be found...
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