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Machine Learning with PyTorch and Scikit-Learn

You're reading from  Machine Learning with PyTorch and Scikit-Learn

Product type Book
Published in Feb 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801819312
Pages 774 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (3):
Sebastian Raschka Sebastian Raschka
Profile icon Sebastian Raschka
Yuxi (Hayden) Liu Yuxi (Hayden) Liu
Profile icon Yuxi (Hayden) Liu
Vahid Mirjalili Vahid Mirjalili
Profile icon Vahid Mirjalili
View More author details

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Preface 1. Giving Computers the Ability to Learn from Data 2. Training Simple Machine Learning Algorithms for Classification 3. A Tour of Machine Learning Classifiers Using Scikit-Learn 4. Building Good Training Datasets – Data Preprocessing 5. Compressing Data via Dimensionality Reduction 6. Learning Best Practices for Model Evaluation and Hyperparameter Tuning 7. Combining Different Models for Ensemble Learning 8. Applying Machine Learning to Sentiment Analysis 9. Predicting Continuous Target Variables with Regression Analysis 10. Working with Unlabeled Data – Clustering Analysis 11. Implementing a Multilayer Artificial Neural Network from Scratch 12. Parallelizing Neural Network Training with PyTorch 13. Going Deeper – The Mechanics of PyTorch 14. Classifying Images with Deep Convolutional Neural Networks 15. Modeling Sequential Data Using Recurrent Neural Networks 16. Transformers – Improving Natural Language Processing with Attention Mechanisms 17. Generative Adversarial Networks for Synthesizing New Data 18. Graph Neural Networks for Capturing Dependencies in Graph Structured Data 19. Reinforcement Learning for Decision Making in Complex Environments 20. Other Books You May Enjoy
21. Index

Implementing a perceptron learning algorithm in Python

In the previous section, we learned how Rosenblatt’s perceptron rule works; let’s now implement it in Python and apply it to the Iris dataset that we introduced in Chapter 1, Giving Computers the Ability to Learn from Data.

An object-oriented perceptron API

We will take an object-oriented approach to defining the perceptron interface as a Python class, which will allow us to initialize new Perceptron objects that can learn from data via a fit method and make predictions via a separate predict method. As a convention, we append an underscore (_) to attributes that are not created upon the initialization of the object, but we do this by calling the object’s other methods, for example, self.w_.

Additional resources for Python’s scientific computing stack

If you are not yet familiar with Python’s scientific libraries or need a refresher, please see the following resources...

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