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Mastering PyTorch

You're reading from   Mastering PyTorch Build powerful neural network architectures using advanced PyTorch 1.x features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789614381
Length 450 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ashish Ranjan Jha Ashish Ranjan Jha
Author Profile Icon Ashish Ranjan Jha
Ashish Ranjan Jha
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: PyTorch Overview
2. Chapter 1: Overview of Deep Learning using PyTorch FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Combining CNNs and LSTMs 4. Section 2: Working with Advanced Neural Network Architectures
5. Chapter 3: Deep CNN Architectures 6. Chapter 4: Deep Recurrent Model Architectures 7. Chapter 5: Hybrid Advanced Models 8. Section 3: Generative Models and Deep Reinforcement Learning
9. Chapter 6: Music and Text Generation with PyTorch 10. Chapter 7: Neural Style Transfer 11. Chapter 8: Deep Convolutional GANs 12. Chapter 9: Deep Reinforcement Learning 13. Section 4: PyTorch in Production Systems
14. Chapter 10: Operationalizing PyTorch Models into Production 15. Chapter 11: Distributed Training 16. Chapter 12: PyTorch and AutoML 17. Chapter 13: PyTorch and Explainable AI 18. Chapter 14: Rapid Prototyping with PyTorch 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Developing LeNet from scratch

LeNet, originally known as LeNet-5, is one of the earliest CNN models, developed in 1998. The number 5 in LeNet-5 represents the total number of layers in this model, that is, two convolutional and three fully connected layers. With roughly 60,000 total parameters, this model gave state-of-the-art performance on image recognition tasks for handwritten digit images in the year 1998. As expected from a CNN model, LeNet demonstrated rotation, position, and scale invariance as well as robustness against distortion in images. Contrary to the classical machine learning models of the time, such as SVMs, which treated each pixel of the image separately, LeNet exploited the correlation among neighboring pixels.

Note that although LeNet was developed for handwritten digit recognition, it can certainly be extended for other image classification tasks, as we shall see in our next exercise. The following diagram shows the architecture of a LeNet model:

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