Reader small image

You're reading from  Advanced Deep Learning with Keras

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2018
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788629416
Edition1st Edition
Languages
Right arrow
Author (1)
Rowel Atienza
Rowel Atienza
author image
Rowel Atienza

Rowel Atienza is an Associate Professor at the Electrical and Electronics Engineering Institute of the University of the Philippines, Diliman. He holds the Dado and Maria Banatao Institute Professorial Chair in Artificial Intelligence. Rowel has been fascinated with intelligent robots since he graduated from the University of the Philippines. He received his MEng from the National University of Singapore for his work on an AI-enhanced four-legged robot. He finished his Ph.D. at The Australian National University for his contribution on the field of active gaze tracking for human-robot interaction. Rowel's current research work focuses on AI and computer vision. He dreams on building useful machines that can perceive, understand, and reason. To help make his dreams become real, Rowel has been supported by grants from the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), Samsung Research Philippines, and Commission on Higher Education-Philippine California Advanced Research Institutes (CHED-PCARI).
Read more about Rowel Atienza

Right arrow

Conclusion


This chapter discussed the general principles behind GANs, to give you a foundation to the more advanced topics we'll now move on to, including Improved GANs, Disentangled Representations GANs, and Cross-Doman GANs. We started this chapter by understanding how GANs are made up of two networks called generator and discriminator. The role of the discriminator is to discriminate between real and fake signals. The aim of the generator is to fool the discriminator. The generator is normally combined with the discriminator to form an adversarial network. It is through training the adversarial network that the generator learns how to produce fake signals that can trick the discriminator.

We also learned how GANs are easy to build but notoriously difficult to train. Two example implementations in Keras were presented. DCGAN demonstrated that it is possible to train GANs to generate fake images using deep CNNs. The fake images are MNIST digits. However, the DCGAN generator has no control...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Advanced Deep Learning with Keras
Published in: Oct 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788629416

Author (1)

author image
Rowel Atienza

Rowel Atienza is an Associate Professor at the Electrical and Electronics Engineering Institute of the University of the Philippines, Diliman. He holds the Dado and Maria Banatao Institute Professorial Chair in Artificial Intelligence. Rowel has been fascinated with intelligent robots since he graduated from the University of the Philippines. He received his MEng from the National University of Singapore for his work on an AI-enhanced four-legged robot. He finished his Ph.D. at The Australian National University for his contribution on the field of active gaze tracking for human-robot interaction. Rowel's current research work focuses on AI and computer vision. He dreams on building useful machines that can perceive, understand, and reason. To help make his dreams become real, Rowel has been supported by grants from the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), Samsung Research Philippines, and Commission on Higher Education-Philippine California Advanced Research Institutes (CHED-PCARI).
Read more about Rowel Atienza