Difference between revisions of "Loss"

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* [http://ml-cheatsheet.readthedocs.io/en/latest/loss_functions.html Loss Functions | ML Cheatsheet]
 
* [http://ml-cheatsheet.readthedocs.io/en/latest/loss_functions.html Loss Functions | ML Cheatsheet]
  
There are many options for loss in Tensorflow (Keras). The actual optimized objective is the mean of the output array across all datapoints. A loss function gives a distance between a model's predictions to the ground truth labels. This is the distance (loss value) that the network aims to minimize; the lower this value, the better the current model describes our training data set.  [http://keras.io/losses/ Click here For a list of Keras loss functions.] Loss is one of the two parameters required to compile a model...
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There are many options for loss in Tensorflow (Keras). The actual optimized objective is the mean of the output array across all datapoints. A loss function gives a distance between a model's predictions to the ground truth labels. This is the distance (loss value) that the network aims to minimize; the lower this value, the better the current model describes our training data set.  [http://keras.io/losses/ Click here For a list of Keras loss functions.] Loss is one of the two parameters required to compile a model...
  
 
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Revision as of 09:23, 31 August 2019

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There are many options for loss in Tensorflow (Keras). The actual optimized objective is the mean of the output array across all datapoints. A loss function gives a distance between a model's predictions to the ground truth labels. This is the distance (loss value) that the network aims to minimize; the lower this value, the better the current model describes our training data set. Click here For a list of Keras loss functions. Loss is one of the two parameters required to compile a model...


model.compile(optimizer='sgd'. loss='mean_squared_error')