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Deep Learning for Beginners

You're reading from   Deep Learning for Beginners A beginner's guide to getting up and running with deep learning from scratch using Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838640859
Length 432 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Pablo Rivas Pablo Rivas
Author Profile Icon Pablo Rivas
Pablo Rivas
Dr. Pablo Rivas Dr. Pablo Rivas
Author Profile Icon Dr. Pablo Rivas
Dr. Pablo Rivas
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Up to Speed
2. Introduction to Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 3. Setup and Introduction to Deep Learning Frameworks 4. Preparing Data 5. Learning from Data 6. Training a Single Neuron 7. Training Multiple Layers of Neurons 8. Section 2: Unsupervised Deep Learning
9. Autoencoders 10. Deep Autoencoders 11. Variational Autoencoders 12. Restricted Boltzmann Machines 13. Section 3: Supervised Deep Learning
14. Deep and Wide Neural Networks 15. Convolutional Neural Networks 16. Recurrent Neural Networks 17. Generative Adversarial Networks 18. Final Remarks on the Future of Deep Learning 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Sequence-to-vector models

In the previous section, you technically saw a sequence-to-vector model, which took a sequence (of numbers representing words) and mapped to a vector (of one dimension corresponding to a movie review). However, to appreciate these models further, we will move back to MNIST as the source of input to build a model that will take one MNIST numeral and map it to a latent vector.

Unsupervised model

Let's work in the autoencoder architecture shown in the following diagram. We have studied autoencoders before and now we will use them again since we learned that they are powerful in finding vectorial representations (latent spaces) that are robust and driven by unsupervised learning:

Figure 13.10. LSTM-based autoencoder architecture for MNIST

The goal here is to take an image and find its latent representation, which, in the example of Figure 13.10, would be two dimensions. However, you might be wondering: how can an image be a sequence?

We can interpret an image...

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