Reader small image

You're reading from  Mastering PyTorch

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2021
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781789614381
Edition1st Edition
Languages
Tools
Right arrow
Author (1)
Ashish Ranjan Jha
Ashish Ranjan Jha
author image
Ashish Ranjan Jha

Ashish Ranjan Jha received his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from IIT Roorkee (India), a master's degree in Computer Science from EPFL (Switzerland), and an MBA degree from Quantic School of Business (Washington). He has received a distinction in all 3 of his degrees. He has worked for large technology companies, including Oracle and Sony as well as the more recent tech unicorns such as Revolut, mostly focused on artificial intelligence. He currently works as a machine learning engineer. Ashish has worked on a range of products and projects, from developing an app that uses sensor data to predict the mode of transport to detecting fraud in car damage insurance claims. Besides being an author, machine learning engineer, and data scientist, he also blogs frequently on his personal blog site about the latest research and engineering topics around machine learning.
Read more about Ashish Ranjan Jha

Right arrow

Defining the generator and discriminator networks

As mentioned earlier, GANs are composed of two components – the generator and the discriminator. Both of these are essentially neural networks. Generators and discriminators with different neural architectures produce different types of GANs. For example, DCGANs purely have CNNs as the generator and discriminator. You can find a list of different types of GANs along with their PyTorch implementations at https://github.com/eriklindernoren/PyTorch-GAN.

For any GAN that is used to generate some kind of real data, the generator usually takes random noise as input and produces an output with the same dimensions as the real data. We call this generated output fake data. The discriminator, on the other hand, works as a binary classifier. It takes in the generated fake data and the real data (one at a time) as input and predicts whether the input data is real or fake. Figure 8.1 shows a diagram of the overall GAN model schematic:

...
lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Mastering PyTorch
Published in: Feb 2021Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781789614381

Author (1)

author image
Ashish Ranjan Jha

Ashish Ranjan Jha received his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from IIT Roorkee (India), a master's degree in Computer Science from EPFL (Switzerland), and an MBA degree from Quantic School of Business (Washington). He has received a distinction in all 3 of his degrees. He has worked for large technology companies, including Oracle and Sony as well as the more recent tech unicorns such as Revolut, mostly focused on artificial intelligence. He currently works as a machine learning engineer. Ashish has worked on a range of products and projects, from developing an app that uses sensor data to predict the mode of transport to detecting fraud in car damage insurance claims. Besides being an author, machine learning engineer, and data scientist, he also blogs frequently on his personal blog site about the latest research and engineering topics around machine learning.
Read more about Ashish Ranjan Jha