added lecture notes for cs231n

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Prakhar Srivastav 2015-02-09 11:36:39 +03:00
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- [2013 Lectures](http://cm.dce.harvard.edu/2014/01/14328/publicationListing.shtml) *(slightly better)*
- [CS 231n](http://cs231n.stanford.edu/) **Convolutional Neural Networks for Visual Recognition** *Stanford University* <img src="https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/icons/emoji/unicode/1f4bb.png" width="20" height="20" alt="Assignments" title="Assignments" /> <img src="https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/icons/emoji/unicode/1f4dd.png" width="20" height="20" alt="Lecture Notes" title="Lecture Notes" />
- Computer Vision has become ubiquitous in our society, with applications in search, image understanding, apps, mapping, medicine, drones, and self-driving cars. This course 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. During the 10-week course, students will learn to implement, train and debug their own neural networks and gain a detailed understanding of cutting-edge research in computer vision.
- [Lecture Notes](http://cs231n.stanford.edu/syllabus.html)
- [Github Page](http://cs231n.github.io/)
- [COMS 4771](http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~jebara/4771/index.html) **Machine Learning** *Columbia University* <img src="https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/icons/emoji/unicode/1f4bb.png" width="20" height="20" alt="Assignments" title="Assignments" /> <img src="https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/icons/emoji/unicode/1f4dd.png" width="20" height="20" alt="Lecture Notes" title="Lecture Notes" />
- Course taught by [Tony Jebara](http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~jebara/resume.html) introduces topics in Machine Learning for both generative and discriminative estimation. Material will include least squares methods, Gaussian distributions, linear classification, linear regression, maximum likelihood, exponential family distributions, Bayesian networks, Bayesian inference, mixture models, the EM algorithm, graphical models, hidden Markov models, support vector machines, and kernel methods.