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Data Science  with Python

You're reading from   Data Science with Python Combine Python with machine learning principles to discover hidden patterns in raw data

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838552862
Length 426 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Rohan Chopra Rohan Chopra
Author Profile Icon Rohan Chopra
Rohan Chopra
Mohamed Noordeen Alaudeen Mohamed Noordeen Alaudeen
Author Profile Icon Mohamed Noordeen Alaudeen
Mohamed Noordeen Alaudeen
Aaron England Aaron England
Author Profile Icon Aaron England
Aaron England
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

About the Book 1. Introduction to Data Science and Data Pre-Processing FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Visualization 3. Introduction to Machine Learning via Scikit-Learn 4. Dimensionality Reduction and Unsupervised Learning 5. Mastering Structured Data 6. Decoding Images 7. Processing Human Language 8. Tips and Tricks of the Trade 1. Appendix

Cross-entropy Loss

Cross-entropy loss is used when we are working with a classification problem where the output of each class is a probability value between 0 and 1. The loss here increases as the model deviates from the actual value; it follows a negative log graph. This helps when the model predicts probabilities that are far from the actual value. For example, if the probability of the true label is 0.05, we penalize the model with a huge loss. On the other hand, if the probability of the true label is 0.40, we penalize it with a smaller loss.

Figure 6.9: Graph of log loss versus probability

The preceding graph shows that the loss increases exponentially as the predictions get further from the true label. The formula that the cross-entropy loss follows is as follows:

Figure 6.10: Cross entropy loss formula

M is number of classes in the dataset (10 in the case of MNIST), y is the true label, and p is the predicted probability of the class. We prefer cross-entropy...

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