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Deep Learning By Example

You're reading from   Deep Learning By Example A hands-on guide to implementing advanced machine learning algorithms and neural networks

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788399906
Length 450 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ahmed Menshawy Ahmed Menshawy
Author Profile Icon Ahmed Menshawy
Ahmed Menshawy
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Data Science - A Birds' Eye View FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Modeling in Action - The Titanic Example 3. Feature Engineering and Model Complexity – The Titanic Example Revisited 4. Get Up and Running with TensorFlow 5. TensorFlow in Action - Some Basic Examples 6. Deep Feed-forward Neural Networks - Implementing Digit Classification 7. Introduction to Convolutional Neural Networks 8. Object Detection – CIFAR-10 Example 9. Object Detection – Transfer Learning with CNNs 10. Recurrent-Type Neural Networks - Language Modeling 11. Representation Learning - Implementing Word Embeddings 12. Neural Sentiment Analysis 13. Autoencoders – Feature Extraction and Denoising 14. Generative Adversarial Networks 15. Face Generation and Handling Missing Labels 16. Implementing Fish Recognition 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

A practical example of the skip-gram architecture

Let's go through a practical example and see how skip-gram models will work in this situation:

the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog

First off, we need to make a dataset of words and their corresponding context. Defining the context is up to us, but it has to make sense. So, we'll take a window around the target word and take a word from the right and another from the left.

By following this contextual technique, we will end up with the following set of words and their corresponding context:

([the, brown], quick), ([quick, fox], brown), ([brown, jumped], fox), ...

The generated words and their corresponding context will be represented as pairs of (context, target). The idea of skip-gram models is the inverse of CBOW ones. In the skip- gram model, we will try to predict the context of the word based on its target...

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