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Python: Advanced Guide to Artificial Intelligence

You're reading from   Python: Advanced Guide to Artificial Intelligence Expert machine learning systems and intelligent agents using Python

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Product type Course
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789957211
Length 764 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Giuseppe Bonaccorso Giuseppe Bonaccorso
Author Profile Icon Giuseppe Bonaccorso
Giuseppe Bonaccorso
Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani
Author Profile Icon Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani
Rajalingappaa Shanmugamani
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Table of Contents (31) Chapters Close

Title Page
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Machine Learning Model Fundamentals FREE CHAPTER 2. Introduction to Semi-Supervised Learning 3. Graph-Based Semi-Supervised Learning 4. Bayesian Networks and Hidden Markov Models 5. EM Algorithm and Applications 6. Hebbian Learning and Self-Organizing Maps 7. Clustering Algorithms 8. Advanced Neural Models 9. Classical Machine Learning with TensorFlow 10. Neural Networks and MLP with TensorFlow and Keras 11. RNN with TensorFlow and Keras 12. CNN with TensorFlow and Keras 13. Autoencoder with TensorFlow and Keras 14. TensorFlow Models in Production with TF Serving 15. Deep Reinforcement Learning 16. Generative Adversarial Networks 17. Distributed Models with TensorFlow Clusters 18. Debugging TensorFlow Models 19. Tensor Processing Units
20. Getting Started 21. Image Classification 22. Image Retrieval 23. Object Detection 24. Semantic Segmentation 25. Similarity Learning 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

The perceptron


Let's understand the most basic building block of a neural network, the perceptron, also known as the artificial neuron. The concept of the perceptron originated in the works of Frank Rosenblatt in 1962.

Note

You may want to read the following work to explore the origins of neural networks:

 

Frank Rosenblatt, Principles of Neurodynamics: Perceptrons and the Theory of Brain Mechanisms. Spartan Books, 1962

In the most simplified view, a perceptron is modeled after the biological neurons such that it takes one or multiple inputs and combines them to generate output.

As shown in the following image, the perceptron takes three inputs and adds them to generate output y:

 Simple perceptron

This perceptron is too simple to be of any practical use. Hence, it has been enhanced by adding the concept of weights, bias, and activation function. The weights are added to each input to get the weighted sum. If the weighted sum

  is less than the threshold value, then the output is 0, else output...

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