Difference between revisions of "10-601 Deep Learning 1"

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* [http://scs.ryerson.ca/~aharley/vis/conv/  3D visualization of a trained net.]
 
* [http://scs.ryerson.ca/~aharley/vis/conv/  3D visualization of a trained net.]
  
For more detail, look at the [http://www.deeplearningbook.org/ MIT Press book] (in preparation) from Bengio
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For more detail, look at the [http://www.deeplearningbook.org/ MIT Press book] (in preparation) from Bengio - it's very complete but also fairly technical.
  
 
===  Things to remember  ===
 
===  Things to remember  ===

Revision as of 13:07, 5 April 2016

This a lecture used in the Syllabus for Machine Learning 10-601B in Spring 2016

Slides

Readings

This area is moving very fast and the textbooks are not up-to-date. Some recommended readings:

I also used some on-line visualizations in the materials for the lecture, especially the part on ConvNets.

For more detail, look at the MIT Press book (in preparation) from Bengio - it's very complete but also fairly technical.

Things to remember

  • The underlying reasons deep networks are hard to train
    • Exploding/vanishing gradients
    • Saturation
  • The importance of key recent advances in neural networks:
    • Matrix operations and GPU training
    • ReLU, cross-entropy, softmax
  • Convolutional networks
    • 2-d convolution
    • How to construct a convolution layer
    • Architecture of CNN: convolution/downsampling pairs