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Literatura académica sobre el tema "Modèles probabilistes profonds"
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Tesis sobre el tema "Modèles probabilistes profonds"
Balikas, Georgios. "Explorer et apprendre à partir de collections de textes multilingues à l'aide des modèles probabilistes latents et des réseaux profonds". Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes (ComUE), 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017GREAM054/document.
Texto completoText is one of the most pervasive and persistent sources of information. Content analysis of text in its broad sense refers to methods for studying and retrieving information from documents. Nowadays, with the ever increasing amounts of text becoming available online is several languages and different styles, content analysis of text is of tremendous importance as it enables a variety of applications. To this end, unsupervised representation learning methods such as topic models and word embeddings constitute prominent tools.The goal of this dissertation is to study and address challengingproblems in this area, focusing on both the design of novel text miningalgorithms and tools, as well as on studying how these tools can be applied to text collections written in a single or several languages.In the first part of the thesis we focus on topic models and more precisely on how to incorporate prior information of text structure to such models.Topic models are built on the premise of bag-of-words, and therefore words are exchangeable. While this assumption benefits the calculations of the conditional probabilities it results in loss of information.To overcome this limitation we propose two mechanisms that extend topic models by integrating knowledge of text structure to them. We assume that the documents are partitioned in thematically coherent text segments. The first mechanism assigns the same topic to the words of a segment. The second, capitalizes on the properties of copulas, a tool mainly used in the fields of economics and risk management that is used to model the joint probability density distributions of random variables while having access only to their marginals.The second part of the thesis explores bilingual topic models for comparable corpora with explicit document alignments. Typically, a document collection for such models is in the form of comparable document pairs. The documents of a pair are written in different languages and are thematically similar. Unless translations, the documents of a pair are similar to some extent only. Meanwhile, representative topic models assume that the documents have identical topic distributions, which is a strong and limiting assumption. To overcome it we propose novel bilingual topic models that incorporate the notion of cross-lingual similarity of the documents that constitute the pairs in their generative and inference processes. Calculating this cross-lingual document similarity is a task on itself, which we propose to address using cross-lingual word embeddings.The last part of the thesis concerns the use of word embeddings and neural networks for three text mining applications. First, we discuss polylingual document classification where we argue that translations of a document can be used to enrich its representation. Using an auto-encoder to obtain these robust document representations we demonstrate improvements in the task of multi-class document classification. Second, we explore multi-task sentiment classification of tweets arguing that by jointly training classification systems using correlated tasks can improve the obtained performance. To this end we show how can achieve state-of-the-art performance on a sentiment classification task using recurrent neural networks. The third application we explore is cross-lingual information retrieval. Given a document written in one language, the task consists in retrieving the most similar documents from a pool of documents written in another language. In this line of research, we show that by adapting the transportation problem for the task of estimating document distances one can achieve important improvements
Hu, Xu. "Towards efficient learning of graphical models and neural networks with variational techniques". Thesis, Paris Est, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019PESC1037.
Texto completoIn this thesis, I will mainly focus on variational inference and probabilistic models. In particular, I will cover several projects I have been working on during my PhD about improving the efficiency of AI/ML systems with variational techniques. The thesis consists of two parts. In the first part, the computational efficiency of probabilistic graphical models is studied. In the second part, several problems of learning deep neural networks are investigated, which are related to either energy efficiency or sample efficiency
Cutajar, Kurt. "Broadening the scope of gaussian processes for large-scale learning". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019SORUS063.
Texto completoThe renewed importance of decision making under uncertainty calls for a re-evaluation of Bayesian inference techniques targeting this goal in the big data regime. Gaussian processes (GPs) are a fundamental building block of many probabilistic kernel machines; however, the computational and storage complexity of GPs hinders their scaling to large modern datasets. The contributions presented in this thesis are two-fold. We first investigate the effectiveness of exact GP inference on a computational budget by proposing a novel scheme for accelerating regression and classification by way of preconditioning. In the spirit of probabilistic numerics, we also show how the numerical uncertainty introduced by approximate linear algebra should be adequately evaluated and incorporated. Bridging the gap between GPs and deep learning techniques remains a pertinent research goal, and the second broad contribution of this thesis is to establish and reinforce the role of GPs, and their deep counterparts (DGPs), in this setting. Whereas GPs and DGPs were once deemed unfit to compete with alternative state-of-the-art methods, we demonstrate how such models can also be adapted to the large-scale and complex tasks to which machine learning is now being applied
Darmet, Ludovic. "Vers une approche basée modèle-image flexible et adaptative en criminalistique des images". Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes, 2020. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-03086427.
Texto completoImages are nowadays a standard and mature medium of communication.They appear in our day to day life and therefore they are subject to concernsabout security. In this work, we study different methods to assess theintegrity of images. Because of a context of high volume and versatilityof tampering techniques and image sources, our work is driven by the necessity to developflexible methods to adapt the diversity of images.We first focus on manipulations detection through statistical modeling ofthe images. Manipulations are elementary operations such as blurring,noise addition, or compression. In this context, we are more preciselyinterested in the effects of pre-processing. Because of storagelimitation or other reasons, images can be resized or compressed justafter their capture. Addition of a manipulation would then be applied on analready pre-processed image. We show that a pre-resizing of test datainduces a drop of performance for detectors trained on full-sized images.Based on these observations, we introduce two methods to counterbalancethis performance loss for a pipeline of classification based onGaussian Mixture Models. This pipeline models the local statistics, onpatches, of natural images. It allows us to propose adaptation of themodels driven by the changes in local statistics. Our first method ofadaptation is fully unsupervised while the second one, only requiring a fewlabels, is weakly supervised. Thus, our methods are flexible to adaptversatility of source of images.Then we move to falsification detection and more precisely to copy-moveidentification. Copy-move is one of the most common image tampering technique. Asource area is copied into a target area within the same image. The vastmajority of existing detectors identify indifferently the two zones(source and target). In an operational scenario, only the target arearepresents a tampering area and is thus an area of interest. Accordingly, wepropose a method to disentangle the two zones. Our method takesadvantage of local modeling of statistics in natural images withGaussian Mixture Model. The procedure is specific for each image toavoid the necessity of using a large training dataset and to increase flexibility.Results for all the techniques described above are illustrated on publicbenchmarks and compared to state of the art methods. We show that theclassical pipeline for manipulations detection with Gaussian MixtureModel and adaptation procedure can surpass results of fine-tuned andrecent deep-learning methods. Our method for source/target disentanglingin copy-move also matches or even surpasses performances of the latestdeep-learning methods. We explain the good results of these classicalmethods against deep-learning by their additional flexibility andadaptation abilities.Finally, this thesis has occurred in the special context of a contestjointly organized by the French National Research Agency and theGeneral Directorate of Armament. We describe in the Appendix thedifferent stages of the contest and the methods we have developed, as well asthe lessons we have learned from this experience to move the image forensics domain into the wild
Dinh, Laurent. "Reparametrization in deep learning". Thèse, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/21139.
Texto completoAlmahairi, Amjad. "Advances in deep learning with limited supervision and computational resources". Thèse, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/23434.
Texto completoDeep neural networks are the cornerstone of state-of-the-art systems for a wide range of tasks, including object recognition, language modelling and machine translation. In the last decade, research in the field of deep learning has led to numerous key advances in designing novel architectures and training algorithms for neural networks. However, most success stories in deep learning heavily relied on two main factors: the availability of large amounts of labelled data and massive computational resources. This thesis by articles makes several contributions to advancing deep learning, specifically in problems with limited or no labelled data, or with constrained computational resources. The first article addresses sparsity of labelled data that emerges in the application field of recommender systems. We propose a multi-task learning framework that leverages natural language reviews in improving recommendation. Specifically, we apply neural-network-based methods for learning representations of products from review text, while learning from rating data. We demonstrate that the proposed method can achieve state-of-the-art performance on the Amazon Reviews dataset. The second article tackles computational challenges in training large-scale deep neural networks. We propose a conditional computation network architecture which can adaptively assign its capacity, and hence computations, across different regions of the input. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our model on visual recognition tasks where objects are spatially localized within the input, while maintaining much lower computational overhead than standard network architectures. The third article contributes to the domain of unsupervised learning with the generative adversarial networks paradigm. We introduce a flexible adversarial training framework, in which not only the generator converges to the true data distribution, but also the discriminator recovers the relative density of the data at the optimum. We validate our framework empirically by showing that the discriminator is able to accurately estimate the true energy of data while obtaining state-of-the-art quality of samples. Finally, in the fourth article, we address the problem of unsupervised domain translation. We propose a model which can learn flexible, many-to-many mappings across domains from unpaired data. We validate our approach on several image datasets, and we show that it can be effectively applied in semi-supervised learning settings.
Tan, Shawn. "Latent variable language models". Thèse, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/22131.
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