Deep Learning: Advanced Computer Vision (GANs, SSD, +More!)
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Created by: Lazy Programmer
VGG, ResNet, Inception, SSD, RetinaNet, Neural Style Transfer, GANs +More in Tensorflow, Keras, and Python
What you'll learn
Understand and apply transfer learning
Understand and use state-of-the-art convolutional neural nets such as VGG, ResNet and Inception
Understand and use object detection algorithms like SSD
Understand and apply neural style transfer
Understand state-of-the-art computer vision topics
Class Activation Maps
GANs (Generative Adversarial Networks)
Object Localization Implementation Project
Requirements
Kn
erstand basic theoretical concepts behind convolution and neural networks
Decent Python coding skills, preferably in data science and the Numpy Stack
Description
Latest update: Instead of SSD, I show you how to use RetinaNet, which is better and more modern. I show you both how to use a pretrained model and how to train one yourself with a custom dataset on Google Colab.
This is one of the most exciting courses I've done and it really shows how fast and how far deep learning has come over the years.
When I first started my deep learning series, I didn't ever consider that I'd make two courses on convolutional neural networks.
I think what you'll find is that, this course is so entirely different from the previous one, you will be impressed at just how much material we have to cover.
Let me give you a quick rundown of what this course is all about:
We're going to bridge the gap between the basic CNN architecture you already know and love, to modern, novel architectures such as VGG, ResNet, and Inception (named after the movie which by the way, is also great!)
We're going to apply these to images of blood cells, and create a system that is a better medical expert than either you or I. This brings up a fascinating idea: that the doctors of the future are not humans, but robots.
In this course, you'll see how we can turn a CNN into an object detection system, that not only classifies images but can locate each object in an image and predict its label.
You can imagine that such a task is a basic prerequisite for self-driving vehicles. (It must be able to detect cars, pedestrians, bicycles, traffic lights, etc. in real-time)
We'll be looking at a state-of-the-art algorithm called SSD which is both faster and more accurate than its predecessors.
Another very popular computer vision task that makes use of CNNs is called neural style transfer.
This is where you take one image called the content image, and another image called the style image, and you combine these to make an entirely new image, that is as if you hired a painter to paint the content of the first image with the style of the other. Unlike a human painter, this can be done in a matter of seconds.
I will also introduce you to the now-famous GAN architecture (Generative Adversarial Networks), where you will learn some of the technology behind how neural networks are used to generate state-of-the-art, photo-realistic images.
Currently, we also implement object localization, which is an essential first step toward implementing a full object detection system.
I hope you're excited to learn about these advanced applications of CNNs, I'll see you in class!
AWESOME FACTS:
One of the major themes of this course is that we're moving away from the CNN itself, to systems involving CNNs.
Instead of focusing on the detailed inner workings of CNNs (which we've already done), we'll focus on high-level building blocks. The result? Almost zero math.
Another result? No complicated low-level code such as that written in Tensorflow, Theano, or PyTorch (although some optional exercises may contain them for the very advanced students). Most of the course will be in Keras which means a lot of the tedious, repetitive stuff is written for you.
Suggested Prerequisites:
Know how to build, train, and use a CNN using some library (preferably in Python)
Understand basic theoretical concepts behind convolution and neural networks
Decent Python coding skills, preferably in data science and the Numpy Stack
WHAT ORDER SHOULD I TAKE YOUR COURSES IN?:
Check out the lecture "What order should I take your courses in?" (available in the Appendix of any of my courses, including the free Numpy course)
Who this course is for:
Students and professionals who want to take their knowledge of computer vision and deep learning to the next level
Anyone who wants to learn about object detection algorithms like SSD and YOLO
Anyone who wants to learn how to write code for neural style transfer
Anyone who wants to use transfer learning
Anyone who wants to shorten training time and build state-of-the-art computer vision nets fast
Screenshots
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