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  2. LeNet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LeNet

    1994 LeNet was a larger version of 1989 LeNet designed to fit the larger MNIST database. It had more feature maps in its convolutional layers, and had an additional layer of hidden units, fully connected to both the last convolutional layer and to the output units. It has 2 convolutions, 2 average poolings, and 2 fully connected layers.

  3. AlexNet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlexNet

    AlexNet architecture and a possible modification. On the top is half of the original AlexNet (which is split into two halves, one per GPU). On the bottom is the same architecture but with the last "projection" layer replaced by another one that projects to fewer outputs.

  4. You Only Look Once - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Only_Look_Once

    The network architecture has 24 convolutional layers followed by 2 fully connected layers. During training, for each cell, if it contains a ground truth bounding box, then only the predicted bounding boxes with the highest IoU with the ground truth bounding boxes is used for gradient descent.

  5. Convolutional neural network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convolutional_neural_network

    A convolutional neural network (CNN) is a regularized type of feedforward neural network that learns features by itself via filter (or kernel) optimization. This type of deep learning network has been applied to process and make predictions from many different types of data including text, images and audio. [1]

  6. U-Net - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-Net

    The network is based on a fully convolutional neural network [2] whose architecture was modified and extended to work with fewer training images and to yield more precise segmentation. Segmentation of a 512 × 512 image takes less than a second on a modern (2015) GPU using the U-Net architecture. [1] [3] [4] [5]

  7. Inception (deep learning architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inception_(deep_learning...

    Inception [1] is a family of convolutional neural network (CNN) for computer vision, introduced by researchers at Google in 2014 as GoogLeNet (later renamed Inception v1).). The series was historically important as an early CNN that separates the stem (data ingest), body (data processing), and head (prediction), an architectural design that persists in all modern

  8. Region Based Convolutional Neural Networks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Region_Based_Convolutional...

    Region-based Convolutional Neural Networks (R-CNN) are a family of machine learning models for computer vision, and specifically object detection and localization. [1] The original goal of R-CNN was to take an input image and produce a set of bounding boxes as output, where each bounding box contains an object and also the category (e.g. car or ...

  9. Convolutional layer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convolutional_layer

    In artificial neural networks, a convolutional layer is a type of network layer that applies a convolution operation to the input. Convolutional layers are some of the primary building blocks of convolutional neural networks (CNNs), a class of neural network most commonly applied to images, video, audio, and other data that have the property of uniform translational symmetry.