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

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781801819312
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (3):
Sebastian Raschka
Sebastian Raschka
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Sebastian Raschka

Sebastian Raschka is an Assistant Professor of Statistics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison focusing on machine learning and deep learning research. As Lead AI Educator at Grid AI, Sebastian plans to continue following his passion for helping people get into machine learning and artificial intelligence.
Read more about Sebastian Raschka

Yuxi (Hayden) Liu
Yuxi (Hayden) Liu
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Yuxi (Hayden) Liu

Yuxi (Hayden) Liu was a Machine Learning Software Engineer at Google. With a wealth of experience from his tenure as a machine learning scientist, he has applied his expertise across data-driven domains and applied his ML expertise in computational advertising, cybersecurity, and information retrieval. He is the author of a series of influential machine learning books and an education enthusiast. His debut book, also the first edition of Python Machine Learning by Example, ranked the #1 bestseller in Amazon and has been translated into many different languages.
Read more about Yuxi (Hayden) Liu

Vahid Mirjalili
Vahid Mirjalili
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Vahid Mirjalili

Vahid Mirjalili is a deep learning researcher focusing on CV applications. Vahid received a Ph.D. degree in both Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science from Michigan State University.
Read more about Vahid Mirjalili

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Summary

In this chapter, we learned about CNNs and their main components. We started with the convolution operation and looked at 1D and 2D implementations. Then, we covered another type of layer that is found in several common CNN architectures: the subsampling or so-called pooling layers. We primarily focused on the two most common forms of pooling: max-pooling and average-pooling.

Next, putting all these individual concepts together, we implemented deep CNNs using the torch.nn module. The first network we implemented was applied to the already familiar MNIST handwritten digit recognition problem.

Then, we implemented a second CNN on a more complex dataset consisting of face images and trained the CNN for smile classification. Along the way, you also learned about data augmentation and different transformations that we can apply to face images using the torchvision.transforms module.

In the next chapter, we will move on to recurrent neural networks (RNNs). RNNs are used...

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Machine Learning with PyTorch and Scikit-Learn
Published in: Feb 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781801819312

Authors (3)

author image
Sebastian Raschka

Sebastian Raschka is an Assistant Professor of Statistics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison focusing on machine learning and deep learning research. As Lead AI Educator at Grid AI, Sebastian plans to continue following his passion for helping people get into machine learning and artificial intelligence.
Read more about Sebastian Raschka

author image
Yuxi (Hayden) Liu

Yuxi (Hayden) Liu was a Machine Learning Software Engineer at Google. With a wealth of experience from his tenure as a machine learning scientist, he has applied his expertise across data-driven domains and applied his ML expertise in computational advertising, cybersecurity, and information retrieval. He is the author of a series of influential machine learning books and an education enthusiast. His debut book, also the first edition of Python Machine Learning by Example, ranked the #1 bestseller in Amazon and has been translated into many different languages.
Read more about Yuxi (Hayden) Liu

author image
Vahid Mirjalili

Vahid Mirjalili is a deep learning researcher focusing on CV applications. Vahid received a Ph.D. degree in both Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science from Michigan State University.
Read more about Vahid Mirjalili