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Deep Learning with TensorFlow 2 and Keras

You're reading from   Deep Learning with TensorFlow 2 and Keras Regression, ConvNets, GANs, RNNs, NLP, and more with TensorFlow 2 and the Keras API

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838823412
Length 646 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Dr. Amita Kapoor Dr. Amita Kapoor
Author Profile Icon Dr. Amita Kapoor
Dr. Amita Kapoor
Sujit Pal Sujit Pal
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Sujit Pal
Antonio Gulli Antonio Gulli
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Antonio Gulli
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Neural Network Foundations with TensorFlow 2.0 2. TensorFlow 1.x and 2.x FREE CHAPTER 3. Regression 4. Convolutional Neural Networks 5. Advanced Convolutional Neural Networks 6. Generative Adversarial Networks 7. Word Embeddings 8. Recurrent Neural Networks 9. Autoencoders 10. Unsupervised Learning 11. Reinforcement Learning 12. TensorFlow and Cloud 13. TensorFlow for Mobile and IoT and TensorFlow.js 14. An introduction to AutoML 15. The Math Behind Deep Learning 16. Tensor Processing Unit 17. Other Books You May Enjoy
18. Index

Attention mechanism

In the previous section we saw how the context or thought vector from the last time step of the encoder is fed into the decoder as the initial hidden state. As the context flows through the time steps on the decoder, the signal gets combined with the decoder output and progressively gets weaker and weaker. The result is that the context does not have much effect towards the later time steps on the decoder.

In addition, certain sections of the decoder output may depend more heavily on certain sections of the input. For example, consider an input "thank you very much", and the corresponding output "merci beaucoup" for an English to French translation network such as the one we looked at in the previous section. Here the English phrases "thank you", and "very much", correspond to the French "merci" and "beaucoup" respectively. This information is also not conveyed adequately through the single context vector...

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