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Machine Learning with Swift

You're reading from   Machine Learning with Swift Artificial Intelligence for iOS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787121515
Length 378 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Jojo Moolayil Jojo Moolayil
Author Profile Icon Jojo Moolayil
Jojo Moolayil
Oleksandr Baiev Oleksandr Baiev
Author Profile Icon Oleksandr Baiev
Oleksandr Baiev
Alexander Sosnovshchenko Alexander Sosnovshchenko
Author Profile Icon Alexander Sosnovshchenko
Alexander Sosnovshchenko
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Classification – Decision Tree Learning 3. K-Nearest Neighbors Classifier 4. K-Means Clustering 5. Association Rule Learning 6. Linear Regression and Gradient Descent 7. Linear Classifier and Logistic Regression 8. Neural Networks 9. Convolutional Neural Networks 10. Natural Language Processing 11. Machine Learning Libraries 12. Optimizing Neural Networks for Mobile Devices 13. Best Practices

Building a neural layer in Swift


A fully-connected layer is easy to implement, because it can be expressed as two operations:

  • A matrix multiplication between weights matrix W and input vector x.
  • A point wise application of activation function f :

Figure 8.5: One layer in detail

In many frameworks, the two operations are separated so that matrix multiplication happens in the fully-connected layer and activation happens in the next nonlinearity layer. This is handy because in this way we can easily replace the weighted sum with convolution. In the next chapter, we will discuss convolutional NNs.

But for now, let's see how NNs can perform logical operations. One neuron is enough to model any logical gate, except XOR. This finding caused the first AI winter in the 1960s; however, XOR is trivial to a model having a network with two layers.

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