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  2. Long short-term memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_short-term_memory

    In theory, classic RNNs can keep track of arbitrary long-term dependencies in the input sequences. The problem with classic RNNs is computational (or practical) in nature: when training a classic RNN using back-propagation, the long-term gradients which are back-propagated can "vanish", meaning they can tend to zero due to very small numbers creeping into the computations, causing the model to ...

  3. Connectionist temporal classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connectionist_temporal...

    The input is a sequence of observations, and the outputs are a sequence of labels, which can include blank outputs. The difficulty of training comes from there being many more observations than there are labels. For example, in speech audio there can be multiple time slices which correspond to a single phoneme.

  4. ELMo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELMo

    ELMo is a multilayered bidirectional LSTM on top of a token embedding layer. The output of all LSTMs concatenated together consists of the token embedding. The input text sequence is first mapped by an embedding layer into a sequence of vectors. Then two parts are run in parallel over it.

  5. Recurrent neural network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recurrent_neural_network

    Recurrent neural networks (RNNs) are a class of artificial neural network commonly used for sequential data processing. Unlike feedforward neural networks, which process data in a single pass, RNNs process data across multiple time steps, making them well-adapted for modelling and processing text, speech, and time series.

  6. Recursive neural network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_neural_network

    A recursive neural network is a kind of deep neural network created by applying the same set of weights recursively over a structured input, to produce a structured prediction over variable-size input structures, or a scalar prediction on it, by traversing a given structure in topological order.

  7. Feedforward neural network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feedforward_neural_network

    The two historically common activation functions are both sigmoids, and are described by = ⁡ = (+).The first is a hyperbolic tangent that ranges from -1 to 1, while the other is the logistic function, which is similar in shape but ranges from 0 to 1.

  8. Bidirectional recurrent neural networks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidirectional_recurrent...

    For example, multilayer perceptron (MLPs) and time delay neural network (TDNNs) have limitations on the input data flexibility, as they require their input data to be fixed. Standard recurrent neural network (RNNs) also have restrictions as the future input information cannot be reached from the current state. On the contrary, BRNNs do not ...

  9. Attention Is All You Need - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attention_Is_All_You_Need

    The encoder is an LSTM that takes in a sequence of tokens and turns it into a vector. The decoder is another LSTM that converts the vector into a sequence of tokens. Similarly, another 130M-parameter model used gated recurrent units (GRU) instead of LSTM. [20] Later research showed that GRUs are neither better nor worse than LSTMs for seq2seq ...