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Mastering Java Machine Learning

You're reading from   Mastering Java Machine Learning A Java developer's guide to implementing machine learning and big data architectures

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785880513
Length 556 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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 Kamath Kamath
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Kamath
Krishna Choppella Krishna Choppella
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Krishna Choppella
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Machine Learning Review FREE CHAPTER 2. Practical Approach to Real-World Supervised Learning 3. Unsupervised Machine Learning Techniques 4. Semi-Supervised and Active Learning 5. Real-Time Stream Machine Learning 6. Probabilistic Graph Modeling 7. Deep Learning 8. Text Mining and Natural Language Processing 9. Big Data Machine Learning – The Final Frontier A. Linear Algebra B. Probability Index

Multi-layer feed-forward neural network

Historically, artificial neural networks have been largely identified by multi-layer feed-forward perceptrons, and so we will begin with a discussion of the primitive elements of the structure of such networks, how to train them, the problem of overfitting, and techniques to address it.

Inputs, neurons, activation function, and mathematical notation

A single neuron or perceptron is the same as the unit described in the Linear Regression topic in Chapter 2, Practical Approach to Real-World Supervised Learning. In this chapter, the data instance vector will be represented by x and has d dimensions, and each dimension can be represented as Inputs, neurons, activation function, and mathematical notation. The weights associated with each dimension are represented as a weight vector w that has d dimensions, and each dimension can be represented as Inputs, neurons, activation function, and mathematical notation. Each neuron has an extra input b, known as the bias, associated with it.

Neuron pre-activation performs the linear transformation of inputs given by:

Inputs, neurons, activation function, and mathematical notation

The activation function...

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