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In Lecture 5 we move from fully-connected neural networks to convolutional neural networks. We discuss some of the key historical milestones in the development of convolutional networks, including the perceptron, the neocognitron, LeNet, and AlexNet. We introduce convolution, pooling, and fully-connected layers which form the basis for modern convolutional networks. Keywords: Convolutional neural networks, perceptron, neocognitron, LeNet, AlexNet, convolution, pooling, fully-connected layers Slides: http://cs231n.stanford.edu/slides/201... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Convolutional Neural Networks for Visual Recognition Instructors: Fei-Fei Li: http://vision.stanford.edu/feifeili/ Justin Johnson: http://cs.stanford.edu/people/jcjohns/ Serena Yeung: http://ai.stanford.edu/~syyeung/ Computer Vision has become ubiquitous in our society, with applications in search, image understanding, apps, mapping, medicine, drones, and self-driving cars. Core to many of these applications are visual recognition tasks such as image classification, localization and detection. Recent developments in neural network (aka “deep learning”) approaches have greatly advanced the performance of these state-of-the-art visual recognition systems. This lecture collection is a deep dive into details of the deep learning architectures with a focus on learning end-to-end models for these tasks, particularly image classification. From this lecture collection, students will learn to implement, train and debug their own neural networks and gain a detailed understanding of cutting-edge research in computer vision. Website: http://cs231n.stanford.edu/ For additional learning opportunities please visit: http://online.stanford.edu/