Introducing Machine Learning

Introducing Machine Learning book cover

Introducing Machine Learning

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Master machine learning concepts and develop real-world solutions

Machine learning offers immense opportunities, and Introducing Machine Learning delivers practical knowledge to make the most of them. Dino and Francesco Esposito start with a quick overview of the foundations of artificial intelligence and the basic steps of any machine learning project. Next, they introduce Microsoft’s powerful ML.NET library, including capabilities for data processing, training, and evaluation. They present families of algorithms that can be trained to solve real-life problems, as well as deep learning techniques utilizing neural networks. The authors conclude by introducing valuable runtime services available through the Azure cloud platform and consider the long-term business vision for machine learning.

· 14-time Microsoft MVP Dino Esposito and Francesco Esposito help you

· Explore what’s known about how humans learn and how intelligent software is built

· Discover which problems machine learning can address

· Understand the machine learning pipeline: the steps leading to a deliverable model

· Use AutoML to automatically select the best pipeline for any problem and dataset

· Master ML.NET, implement its pipeline, and apply its tasks and algorithms

· Explore the mathematical foundations of machine learning

· Make predictions, improve decision-making, and apply probabilistic methods

· Group data via classification and clustering

· Learn the fundamentals of deep learning, including neural network design

· Leverage AI cloud services to build better real-world solutions faster

About This Book

· For professionals who want to build machine learning applications: both developers who need data science skills and data scientists who need relevant programming skills

· Includes examples of machine learning coding scenarios built using the ML.NET library

Dino Esposito: If I look back, I count more 20 books authored and 1000+ articles in a 25-year-long career. I’ve been writing the “Cutting Edge” column for MSDN Magazine month after month for 22 consecutive years. It is commonly recognized that such books and articles have helped the professional growth of thousands of .NET and ASP.NET developers and software architects worldwide.

After I escaped a dreadful COBOL project, in 1992 I started as a C developer, and since then, I have witnessed MFC and ATL, COM and DCOM, the debut of .NET, the rise and fall of Silverlight, and the ups and downs of various architectural patterns. In 1995 I led a team of five dreamers who actually deployed things that today we would call Google Photos and Shuttershock–desktop applications capable of dealing with photos stored in a virtual place that nobody had called the cloud yet. Since 2003 I have written Microsoft Press books about ASP.NET and also authored the bestseller Microsoft .NET: Architecting Applications for the Enterprise. I have a few successful Pluralsight courses on .NET architecture, ASP.NET MVC UI, and, recently, ML.NET. As architect of most of the backoffice applications that keep the professional tennis world tour running, I’ve been focusing on renewable energy, IoT, and artificial intelligence for the past two years as the corporate digital strategist at BaxEnergy.

You can get in touch with me through https://youbiquitous.net or twitter.com/despos, or you can connect to my LinkedIn network.

Francesco Esposito: I was 12 or so in the early days of the Windows Phone launch, and I absolutely wanted one of those devices in my hands. I could have asked Dad or Mom to buy it, but I didn’t know how they would react. As a normal teenager, I had exactly zero chance of having someone buy it for me. So, I found out I was quite good at making sense of programming languages and impressed some folks at Microsoft enough to have a device to test. A Windows Phone was only the beginning; then came my insane passion for iOS and, later, the shortcuts of C#.

The current part of my life began when I graduated from high school, one year earlier than expected. By the way, only 0.006 percent of students do that in Italy. I felt as powerful as a semi-god and enrolled in mathematics. I failed my first exams, and the shock put me at work day and night on ASP.NET as a self punishment. I founded my small software company, Youbiquitous, and began living on my own money. In 2017, my innate love for mathematics was resurrected and put me back on track with studies and led me to take the plunge in financial investments and machine learning.

This book, then, is the natural consequence of the end of my childhood. I wanted to give something back to my dad and help him make sense of the deep mathematics behind neural networks and algorithms. By the way, I have a dream: developing a supertheory of intelligence that would mathematically explore why the artificial intelligence of today works and where we can go further.

You can get in touch with me at https://youbiquitous.net.

Today, machine learning offers software professionals unparalleled opportunity for career growth. In  Introducing Machine Learning, best-selling software development author, trainer, and consultant Dino Esposito offers a complete introduction to the field for students, programmers, architects, and lead developers alike.
Esposito begins by illuminating what’s known about how humans and machines learn, introducing the most important classes of machine learning algorithms, and explaining what each of them can do. Esposito demystifies key concepts ranging from neural networks to supervised and unsupervised learning. Next, he explains each step needed to build a successful machine learning solution, from collecting and fine-tuning source data to building and testing your solution.
Then, building on these essentials, he guides you through constructing two complete solutions with ML.NET, Microsoft’s powerful open source and cross-platform machine learning framework. Step by step, you’ll create systems for performing sentiment analysis on social feeds, and analyzing traffic to predict accidents. By the time you’re finished, you’ll be ready to participate in data science projects and build working solutions of your own.

Introduction

Part I Laying the Groundwork of Machine Learning

Chapter 1 How Humans Learn

The Journey Toward Thinking Machines

The Dawn of Mechanical Reasoning

Godel’s Incompleteness Theorems

Formalization of Computing Machines

Toward the Formalization of Human Thought

The Birth of Artificial Intelligence as a Discipline

The Biology of Learning

What Is Intelligent Software, Anyway?

How Neurons Work

The Carrot-and-Stick Approach

Adaptability to Changes

Artificial Forms of Intelligence

Primordial Intelligence

Expert Systems

Autonomous Systems

Artificial Forms of Sentiment

Summary

Chapter 2 Intelligent Software

Applied Artificial Intelligence

Evolution of Software Intelligence

Expert Systems

General Artificial Intelligence

Unsupervised Learning

Supervised Learning

Summary

Chapter 3 Mapping Problems and Algorithms

Fundamental Problems

Classifying Objects

Predicting Results

Grouping Objects

More Complex Problems

Image Classification

Object Detection

Text Analytics

Automated Machine Learning

Aspects of an AutoML Platform

The AutoML Model Builder in Action

Summary

Chapter 4 General Steps for a Machine Learning Solution

Data Collection

Data-Driven Culture in the Organization

Storage Options

Data Preparation

Improving Data Quality

Cleaning Data

Feature Engineering

Finalizing the Training Dataset

Model Selection and Training

The Algorithm Cheat Sheet

The Case for Neural Networks

Evaluation of the Model Performance

Deployment of the Model

Choosing the Appropriate Hosting Platform

Exposing an API

Summary

Chapter 5 The Data Factor

Data Quality

Data Validity

Data Collection

Data Integrity

Completeness

Uniqueness

Timeliness

Accuracy

Consistency

What’s a Data Scientist, Anyway?

The Data Scientist at Work

The Data Scientist Tool Chest

Data Scientists and Software Developers

Summary

Part II Machine Learning In .NET

Chapter 6 The .NET Way

Why (Not) Python?

Why Is Python So Popular in Machine Learning?

Taxonomy of Python Machine Learning Libraries

End-to-End Solutions on Top of Python Models

Introducing ML.NET

Creating and Consuming Models in ML.NET

Elements of the Learning Context

Summary

Chapter 7 Implementing the ML.NET Pipeline

The Data to Start From

Exploring the Dataset

Applying Common Data Transformations

Considerations on the Dataset

The Training Step

Picking an Algorithm

Measuring the Actual Value of an Algorithm

Planning the Testing Phase

A Look at the Metrics

Price Prediction from Within a Client Application

Getting the Model File

Setting Up the ASP.NET Application

Making a Taxi Fare Prediction

Devising an Adequate User Interface

Questioning Data and Approach to the Problem

Summary

Chapter 8 ML.NET Tasks and Algorithms

The Overall ML.NET Architecture

Involved Types and Interfaces

Data Representation

Supported Catalogs

Classification Tasks

Binary Classification

Multiclass Classification

Clustering Tasks

Preparing Data for Work

Training the Model

Evaluating the Model

Transfer Learning

Steps for Building an Image Classifier

Applying Necessary Data Transformations

Composing and Training the Model

Margin Notes on Transfer Learning

Summary

Part III Fundamentals of Shallow Learning

Chapter 9 Math Foundations of Machine Learning

Under the Umbrella of Statistics

The Mean in Statistics

The Mode in Statistics

The Median in Statistics

Bias and Variance

The Variance in Statistics

The Bias in Statistics

Data Representation

Five-number Summary

Histograms

Scatter Plots

Scatter Plot Matrices

Plotting at the Appropriate Scale

Summary

Chapter 10 Metrics of Machine Learning

Statistics vs. Machine Learning

The Ultimate Goal of Machine Learning

From Statistical Models to Machine Learning Models

Evaluation of a Machine Learning Model

From Dataset to Predictions

Measuring the Precision of a Model

Preparing Data for Processing

Scaling

Standardization

Normalization

Summary

Chapter 11 How to Make Simple Predictions: Linear Regression

The Problem

Guessing Results Guided by Data

Making Hypotheses About the Relationship

The Linear Algorithm

The General Idea

Identifying the Cost Function

The Ordinary Least Square Algorithm

The Gradient Descent Algorithm

How Good Is the Algorithm?

Improving the Solution

The Polynomial Route

Regularization

Summary

Chapter 12 How to Make Complex Predictions and Decisions: Trees

The Problem

What’s a Tree, Anyway?

Trees in Machine Learning

A Sample Tree-Based Algorithm

Design Principles for Tree-Based Algorithms

Decision Trees versus Expert Systems

Flavors of Tree Algorithms

Classification Trees

How the CART Algorithm Works

How the ID3 Algorithm Works

Regression Trees

How the Algorithm Works

Tree Pruning

Summary

Chapter 13 How to Make Better Decisions: Ensemble Methods

The Problem

The Bagging Technique

Random Forest Algorithms

Steps of the Algorithms

Pros and Cons

The Boosting Technique

The Power of Boosting

Gradient Boosting

Pros and Cons

Summary

Chapter 14 Probabilistic Methods: Naïve Bayes

Quick Introduction to Bayesian Statistics

Introducing Bayesian Probability

Some Preliminary Notation

Bayes’ Theorem

A Practical Code Review Example

Applying Bayesian Statistics to Classification

Initial Formulation of the Problem

A Simplified (Yet Effective) Formulation

Practical Aspects of Bayesian Classifiers

Naïve Bayes Classifiers

The General Algorithm

Multinomial Naïve Bayes

Bernoulli Naïve Bayes

Gaussian Naïve Bayes

Naïve Bayes Regression

Foundation of Bayesian Linear Regression

Applications of Bayesian Linear Regression

Summary

Chapter 15 How to Group Data: Classification and Clustering

A Basic Approach to Supervised Classification

The K-Nearest Neighbors Algorithm

Steps of the Algorithm

Business Scenarios

Support Vector Machine

Overview of the Algorithm

A Quick Mathematical Refresher

Steps of the Algorithm

Unsupervised Clustering

A Business Case: Reducing the Dataset

The K-Means Algorithm

The K-Modes Algorithm

The DBSCAN Algorithm

Summary

Part IV Fundamentals of Deep Learning

Chapter 16 Feed-Forward Neural Networks

A Brief History of Neural Networks

The McCulloch-Pitt Neuron

Feed-Forward Networks

More Sophisticated Networks

Types of Artificial Neurons

The Perceptron Neuron

The Logistic Neuron

Training a Neural Network

The Overall Learning Strategy

The Backpropagation Algorithm

Summary

Chapter 17 Design of a Neural Network

Aspects of a Neural Network

Activation Functions

Hidden Layers

The Output Layer

Building a Neural Network

Available Frameworks

Your First Neural Network in Keras

Neural Networks versus Other Algorithms

Summary

Chapter 18 Other Types of Neural Networks

Common Issues of Feed-Forward Neural Networks

Recurrent Neural Networks

Anatomy of a Stateful Neural Network

LSTM Neural Networks

Convolutional Neural Networks

Image Classification and Recognition

The Convolutional Layer

The Pooling Layer

The Fully Connected Layer

Further Neural Network Developments

Generative Adversarial Neural Networks

Auto-Encoders

Summary

Chapter 19 Sentiment Analysis: An End-to-End Solution

Preparing Data for Training

Formalizing the Problem

Getting the Data.

Manipulating the Data

Considerations on the Intermediate Format

Training the Model

Choosing the Ecosystem

Building a Dictionary of Words

Choosing the Trainer

Other Aspects of the Network

The Client Application

Getting Input for the Model

Getting the Prediction from the Model

Turning the Response into Usable Information

Summary

Part V Final Thoughts

Chapter 20 AI Cloud Services for the Real World

Azure Cognitive Services

Azure Machine Learning Studio

Azure Machine Learning Service

Data Science Virtual Machines

On-Premises Services

SQL Server Machine Learning Services

Machine Learning Server

Microsoft Data Processing Services

Azure Data Lake

Azure Databricks

Azure HDInsight

.NET for Apache Spark

Azure Data Share

Azure Data Factory

Summary

Chapter 21 The Business Perception of AI

Perception of AI in the Industry

Realizing the Potential

What Artificial Intelligence Can Do for You

Challenges Around the Corner

End-to-End Solutions

Let’s Just Call It Consulting

The Borderline Between Software and Data Science

Agile AI

Summary

9780135565667 TOC 12/19/2019

  • Demystifies basic machine learning techniques, algorithms, operations, and tools
  • Walks through building two complete solutions with Microsoft’s ML.NET
  • Guides students from collecting and fine-tuning source data to building and testing solutions
  • Unique programmer-focused insights from best-selling software development author Dino Esposito
The complete developer’s introduction to machine learning and artificial intelligence
  • Demystifies basic machine learning techniques, algorithms, operations, and tools
  • Walks through building two complete solutions with Microsoft’s ML.NET
  • Guides you from collecting and fine-tuning source data to building and testing solutions
  • Unique programmer-focused insights from best-selling software development author Dino Esposito

Additional information

Dimensions 1.30 × 7.35 × 9.05 in
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ISBN-13

ISBN-10

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Subjects

professional, higher education, COM051380, Employability, IT Professional, H-35 MS PRESS PEARSN PROFSSNL, COM021030