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Machine Learning Curriculum

Machine Learning is a branch of Artificial Intelligence dedicated at making machines learn from observational data without being explicitly programmed.

Machine learning and AI are not the same. Machine learning is an instrument in the AI symphony — a component of AI. So what is Machine Learning — or ML — exactly? It’s the ability for an algorithm to learn from prior data in order to produce a behavior. ML is teaching machines to make decisions in situations they have never seen.

Machine Learning in General

Study this section to understand fundamental concepts and develop intuitions before going any deeper.

A computer program is said to learn from experience E with respect to some class of tasks T and performance measure P if its performance at tasks in T, as measured by P, improves with experience E.

Reinforcement Learning

Building a machine that senses the environment and then chooses the best policy (action) to do at any given state to maximize its expected long-term scalar reward is the goal of reinforcement learning.

Deep Learning

Deep learning is a branch of machine learning where deep artificial neural networks (DNN) — algorithms inspired by the way neurons work in the brain — find patterns in raw data by combining multiple layers of artificial neurons. As the layers increase, so does the neural network’s ability to learn increasingly abstract concepts.

The simplest kind of DNN is a Multilayer Perceptron (MLP).

Convolutional Neural Networks

DNNs that work with grid data like sound waveforms, images and videos better than ordinary DNNs. They are based on the assumptions that nearby input units are more related than the distant units. They also utilize translation invariance. For example, given an image, it might be useful to detect the same kind of edges everywhere on the image. They are sometimes called convnets or CNNs.

Recurrent Neural Networks

DNNs that have states. They also understand sequences that vary in length. They are sometimes called RNNs.

Glossary

Open Source Trained Models

Interesting Techniques & Applications

Nice Blogs & Vlogs to Follow

Impactful People

  • Geoffrey Hinton, he has been called the godfather of deep learning by introducing 2 revolutionizing techniques (ReLU and Dropout) with his students. These techniques solve the Vanishing Gradient and Generalization problem of deep neural networks. He also taught a Neural Networks course at Coursera.
  • Yann LeCun, he invented CNNs (Convolutional neural networks), the kind of network that is really popular among computer vision developers today
  • Yoshua Bengio another serious professor at Deep Learning
  • Jeff Dean, a Google Brain engineer, watch his TEDx Talk
  • Ian Goodfellow, he invented GANs (Generative Adversarial Networks), is an OpenAI engineer
  • David Silver this is the guy behind AlphaGo and Artari reinforcement learning game agents at DeepMind
  • Demis Hassabis CEO of DeepMind, has given a lot of talks about AlphaGo and Reinforcement Learning achievements they have
  • Andrej Karparthy he teaches convnet classes, wrote ConvNetJS, and produces a lot of content for DL community, he also writes a blog (see Nice Blogs & Vlogs to Follow section)

Libraries, Frameworks and Services

Glancing at their GitHub statistics can give you an estimate for how active/popular each of them is.

Cutting-Edge Research

Steal the most recent techniques introduced by smart computer scientists (could be you).

Practitioner Community

Thoughtful Insights for Future Research

Uncategorized

Other Big Lists

I am confused, too many links, where do I start?

If you are a beginner and want to get started with my suggestions, please read this issue: offchan42#4

Disclaimer

This is a really big list because I also point to other people's list to ensure that most of the resources are accessible from this page without you looking anywhere else.

Most of these resources are the ones I enjoy reading/watching. I wouldn't put something that I am not interested in here.

NOTE: There is no particular rank for each link. The order in which they appear does not convey any meaning and should not be treated differently.

How to contribute to this list

  1. Fork this repository, then apply your change.
  2. Make a pull request and tag me if you want.
  3. That's it. If your edition is useful, I'll merge it.

Or you can just submit a new issue containing the resource you want me to include if you don't have time to send a pull request.

The resource you want to include should be free to study.


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