Introduction to Convolution Neural Network – GeeksforGeeks
Mục Lục
Introduction:
A Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) is a type of Deep Learning architecture commonly used for image classification and recognition tasks. It consists of multiple layers, including Convolutional layers, Pooling layers, and fully connected layers. The Convolutional layer applies filters to the input image to extract features, the Pooling layer downsamples the image to reduce computation, and the fully connected layer makes the final prediction. The network learns the optimal filters through backpropagation and gradient descent.
It is assumed that the reader knows the concept of Neural networks.
When it comes to Machine Learning, Artificial Neural Networks perform really well. Artificial Neural Networks are used in various classification tasks like image, audio, words. Different types of Neural Networks are used for different purposes, for example for predicting the sequence of words we use Recurrent Neural Networks more precisely an LSTM, similarly for image classification we use Convolution Neural networks. In this blog, we are going to build a basic building block for CNN.
Before diving into the Convolution Neural Network, let us first revisit some concepts of Neural Network. In a regular Neural Network there are three types of layers:
- Input Layers: It’s the layer in which we give input to our model. The number of neurons in this layer is equal to the total number of features in our data (number of pixels in the case of an image).
- Hidden Layer: The input from the Input layer is then feed into the hidden layer. There can be many hidden layers depending upon our model and data size. Each hidden layer can have different numbers of neurons which are generally greater than the number of features. The output from each layer is computed by matrix multiplication of output of the previous layer with learnable weights of that layer and then by the addition of learnable biases followed by activation function which makes the network nonlinear.
- Output Layer: The output from the hidden layer is then fed into a logistic function like sigmoid or softmax which converts the output of each class into the probability score of each class.
The data is then fed into the model and output from each layer is obtained this step is called feedforward, we then calculate the error using an error function, some common error functions are cross-entropy, square loss error, etc. After that, we backpropagate into the model by calculating the derivatives. This step is called Backpropagation which basically is used to minimize the loss.
Here’s the basic python code for a neural network with random inputs and two hidden layers.
Python
activation
=
lambda
x:
1.0
/
(
1.0
+
np.exp(
-
x))
input
=
np.random.randn(
3
,
1
)
hidden_1
=
activation(np.dot(W1,
input
)
+
b1)
hidden_2
=
activation(np.dot(W2, hidden_1)
+
b2)
output
=
np.dot(W3, hidden_2)
+
b3
W1,W2,W3,b1,b2,b3 are learnable parameter of the model.
Convolution Neural Network
Convolution Neural Networks or covnets are neural networks that share their parameters. Imagine you have an image. It can be represented as a cuboid having its length, width (dimension of the image), and height (as images generally have red, green, and blue channels).
Now imagine taking a small patch of this image and running a small neural network on it, with say, k outputs and represent them vertically. Now slide that neural network across the whole image, as a result, we will get another image with different width, height, and depth. Instead of just R, G, and B channels now we have more channels but lesser width and height. This operation is called Convolution. If the patch size is the same as that of the image it will be a regular neural network. Because of this small patch, we have fewer weights.
Now let’s talk about a bit of mathematics that is involved in the whole convolution process.
- Convolution layers consist of a set of learnable filters (a patch in the above image). Every filter has small width and height and the same depth as that of input volume (3 if the input layer is image input).
- For example, if we have to run convolution on an image with dimension 34x34x3. The possible size of filters can be axax3, where ‘a’ can be 3, 5, 7, etc but small as compared to image dimension.
- During forward pass, we slide each filter across the whole input volume step by step where each step is called stride (which can have value 2 or 3 or even 4 for high dimensional images) and compute the dot product between the weights of filters and patch from input volume.
- As we slide our filters we’ll get a 2-D output for each filter and we’ll stack them together and as a result, we’ll get output volume having a depth equal to the number of filters. The network will learn all the filters.
Layers used to build ConvNets
A covnets is a sequence of layers, and every layer transforms one volume to another through a differentiable function.
Types of layers:
Let’s take an example by running a covnets on of image of dimension 32 x 32 x 3.
- Input Layer: This layer holds the raw input of the image with width 32, height 32, and depth 3.
- Convolution Layer: This layer computes the output volume by computing the dot product between all filters and image patches. Suppose we use a total of 12 filters for this layer we’ll get output volume of dimension 32 x 32 x 12.
- Activation Function Layer: This layer will apply an element-wise activation function to the output of the convolution layer. Some common activation functions are RELU: max(0, x), Sigmoid: 1/(1+e^-x), Tanh, Leaky RELU, etc. The volume remains unchanged hence output volume will have dimension 32 x 32 x 12.
- Pool Layer: This layer is periodically inserted in the covnets and its main function is to reduce the size of volume which makes the computation fast reduces memory and also prevents overfitting. Two common types of pooling layers are max pooling and average pooling. If we use a max pool with 2 x 2 filters and stride 2, the resultant volume will be of dimension 16x16x12.
- Fully-Connected Layer: This layer is a regular neural network layer that takes input from the previous layer and computes the class scores and outputs the 1-D array of size equal to the number of classes.
References: Stanford Convolution Neural Network Course (CS231n)
This article is contributed by Akhand Pratap Mishra. If you like GeeksforGeeks and would like to contribute, you can also write an article using write.geeksforgeeks.org or mail your article to [email protected]. See your article appearing on the GeeksforGeeks main page and help other Geeks.
Please write comments if you find anything incorrect, or you want to share more information about the topic discussed above.
Advantages Or Disadvantages:
Advantages of Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs):
- Good at detecting patterns and features in images, videos and audio signals.
- Robust to translation, rotation and scaling invariance.
- End-to-end training, no need for manual feature extraction.
- Can handle large amounts of data and achieve high accuracy.
Disadvantages of Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs):
- Computationally expensive to train and require a lot of memory.
- Can be prone to overfitting if not enough data or proper regularization is used.
- Requires large amount of labeled data.
- Interpretability is limited, it’s hard to understand what the network has learned.
My Personal Notes
arrow_drop_up