A New Deep Sparse Filtering Method Applied to Transfer Learning

Author(s):  
Yan Zhenhao ◽  
Zhang Zongzhen ◽  
Tian Zhiyuan ◽  
Wang Jinrui ◽  
Bao Huaiqian ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Huaiqian Bao ◽  
Zhenhao Yan ◽  
Shanshan Ji ◽  
Jinrui Wang ◽  
Sixiang Jia ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 128 (8) ◽  
pp. 1358-1366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masao Yamamoto ◽  
Hisao Mase ◽  
Hiroshi Yajima ◽  
Hiroshi Kinukawa

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Yuan ◽  
Alejandro Santana-Bonilla ◽  
Martijn Zwijnenburg ◽  
Kim Jelfs

<p>The chemical space for novel electronic donor-acceptor oligomers with targeted properties was explored using deep generative models and transfer learning. A General Recurrent Neural Network model was trained from the ChEMBL database to generate chemically valid SMILES strings. The parameters of the General Recurrent Neural Network were fine-tuned via transfer learning using the electronic donor-acceptor database from the Computational Material Repository to generate novel donor-acceptor oligomers. Six different transfer learning models were developed with different subsets of the donor-acceptor database as training sets. We concluded that electronic properties such as HOMO-LUMO gaps and dipole moments of the training sets can be learned using the SMILES representation with deep generative models, and that the chemical space of the training sets can be efficiently explored. This approach identified approximately 1700 new molecules that have promising electronic properties (HOMO-LUMO gap <2 eV and dipole moment <2 Debye), 6-times more than in the original database. Amongst the molecular transformations, the deep generative model has learned how to produce novel molecules by trading off between selected atomic substitutions (such as halogenation or methylation) and molecular features such as the spatial extension of the oligomer. The method can be extended as a plausible source of new chemical combinations to effectively explore the chemical space for targeted properties.</p>


Author(s):  
Erna Verawati ◽  
Surya Darma Nasution ◽  
Imam Saputra

Sharpening the image of the road display requies a degree of brightness in the process of sharpening the image from the original image result of the improved image. One of the sharpening of the street view image is image processing. Image processing is one of the multimedia components that plays an important role as a form of visual information. There are many image processing methods that are used in sharpening the image of street views, one of them is the gram schmidt spectral sharpening method and high pass filtering. Gram schmidt spectral sharpening method is method that has another name for intensity modulation based on a refinement fillter. While the high pass filtering method is a filter process that btakes image with high intensity gradients and low intensity difference that will be reduced or discarded. Researce result show that the gram schmidt spectral sharpening method and high pass filtering can be implemented properly so that the sharpening of the street view image can be guaranteed sharpening by making changes frome the original image to the image using the gram schmidt spectral sharpening method and high pass filtering.Keywords: Image processing, gram schmidt spectral sharpening and high pass filtering.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Kanayama ◽  
Youngja Park ◽  
Yuta Tsuboi ◽  
Dongmook Yi
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pathikkumar Patel ◽  
Bhargav Lad ◽  
Jinan Fiaidhi

During the last few years, RNN models have been extensively used and they have proven to be better for sequence and text data. RNNs have achieved state-of-the-art performance levels in several applications such as text classification, sequence to sequence modelling and time series forecasting. In this article we will review different Machine Learning and Deep Learning based approaches for text data and look at the results obtained from these methods. This work also explores the use of transfer learning in NLP and how it affects the performance of models on a specific application of sentiment analysis.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas A. Gorski ◽  
John E. Laird
Keyword(s):  

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