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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

Transductive Support Vector Machines (TSVM)


Another approach to the same problem is offered by the TSVM, proposed by T. Joachims (in Transductive Inference for Text Classification using Support Vector Machines, Joachims T., ICML Vol. 99/1999). The idea is to keep the original objective with two sets of slack variables: the first for the labeled samples and the other for the unlabeled ones:

As this is a transductive approach, we need to consider the unlabeled samples as variable-labeled ones (subject to the learning process), imposing a constraint similar to the supervised points. As for the previous algorithm, we assume we have N labeled samples and M unlabeled ones; therefore, the conditions become as follows:

The first constraint is the classical SVM one and it works only on labeled samples. The second one uses the variable y(u)j with the corresponding slack variables ξj to impose a similar condition on the unlabeled samples, while the third one is necessary to constrain the labels to being...

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