Data Science at Home

Francesco Gadaleta
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Apr 2, 2018 • 39min

Episode 31: The End of Privacy

Data is a complex topic, not only related to machine learning algorithms, but also and especially to privacy and security of individuals, the same individuals who create such data just by using the many mobile apps and services that characterize their digital life. In this episode I am together with B.J.n Mendelson, author of “Social Media is Bullshit” from St. Martin’s Press and world-renowned speaker on issues involving the myths and realities involving today’s Internet platforms.  B.J. has a new a book about privacy and sent me a free copy of "Privacy, and how to get it back" that I read in just one day. That was enough to realise how much we have in common when it comes to data and data collection.  
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Nov 21, 2017 • 22min

Episode 30: Neural networks and genetic evolution: an unfeasible approach

Despite what researchers claim about genetic evolution, in this episode we give a realistic view of the field.
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Nov 11, 2017 • 14min

Episode 29: Fail your AI company in 9 steps

In order to succeed with artificial intelligence, it is better to know how to fail first. It is easier than you think. Here are 9 easy steps to fail your AI startup.
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Nov 4, 2017 • 21min

Episode 28: Towards Artificial General Intelligence: preliminary talk

The enthusiasm for artificial intelligence is raising some concerns especially with respect to some ventured conclusions about what AI can really do and what its direct descendent, artificial general intelligence would be capable of doing in the immediate future. From stealing jobs, to exterminating the entire human race, the creativity (of some) seems to have no limits.  In this episode I make sure that everyone comes back to reality - which might sound less exciting than Hollywood but definitely more... real. 
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Oct 30, 2017 • 18min

Episode 27: Techstars accelerator and the culture of fireflies

In the aftermath of the Barclays Accelerator, powered by Techstars experience, one of the most innovative and influential startup accelerators in the world, I’d like to give back to the community lessons learned, including the need for confidence, soft-skills, and efficiency, to be applied to startups that deal with artificial intelligence and data science. In this episode I also share some thoughts about the culture of fireflies in modern and dynamic organisations.
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Oct 23, 2017 • 54min

Episode 26: Deep Learning and Alzheimer

In this episode I speak about Deep Learning technology applied to Alzheimer disorder prediction. I had a great chat with Saman Sarraf, machine learning engineer at Konica Minolta, former lab manager at the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest, University of Toronto and author of DeepAD: Alzheimer′ s Disease Classification via Deep Convolutional Neural Networks using MRI and fMRI. I hope you enjoy the show.
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Oct 16, 2017 • 16min

Episode 25: How to become data scientist [RB]

In this episode, I speak about the requirements and the skills to become data scientist and join an amazing community that is changing the world with data analyticsa
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Oct 9, 2017 • 21min

Episode 24: How to handle imbalanced datasets

In machine learning and data science in general it is very common to deal at some point with imbalanced datasets and class distributions. This is the typical case where the number of observations that belong to one class is significantly lower than those belonging to the other classes.  Actually this happens all the time, in several domains, from finance, to healthcare to social media, just to name a few I have personally worked with. Think about a bank detecting fraudulent transactions among millions or billions of daily operations, or equivalently in healthcare for the identification of rare disorders. In genetics but also with clinical lab tests this is a normal scenario, in which, fortunately there are very few patients affected by a disorder and therefore very few cases wrt the large pool of healthy patients (or not affected). There is no algorithm that can take into account the class distribution or the amount of observations in each class, if it is not explicitly designed to handle such situations. In this episode I speak about some effective techniques to handle imbalanced datasets, advising the right method, or the most appropriate one to the right dataset or problem. In this episode I explain how to deal with such common and challenging scenarios.
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Oct 3, 2017 • 19min

Episode 23: Why do ensemble methods work?

Ensemble methods have been designed to improve the performance of the single model, when the single model is not very accurate. According to the general definition of ensembling, it consists in building a number of single classifiers and then combining or aggregating their predictions into one classifier that is usually stronger than the single one. The key idea behind ensembling is that some models will do well when they model certain aspects of the data while others will do well in modelling other aspects. In this episode I show with a numeric example why and when ensemble methods work.
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Sep 25, 2017 • 20min

Episode 22: Parallelising and distributing Deep Learning

Continuing the discussion of the last two episodes, there is one more aspect of deep learning that I would love to consider and therefore left as a full episode, that is parallelising and distributing deep learning on relatively large clusters. As a matter of fact, computing architectures are changing in a way that is encouraging parallelism more than ever before. And deep learning is no exception and despite the greatest improvements with commodity GPUs - graphical processing units, when it comes to speed, there is still room for improvement. Together with the last two episodes, this one completes the picture of deep learning at scale. Indeed, as I mentioned in the previous episode, How to master optimisation in deep learning, the function optimizer is the horsepower of deep learning and neural networks in general. A slow and inaccurate optimisation method leads to networks that slowly converge to unreliable results. In another episode titled “Additional strategies for optimizing deeplearning” I explained some ways to improve function minimisation and model tuning in order to get better parameters in less time. So feel free to listen to these episodes again, share them with your friends, even re-broadcast or download for your commute. While the methods that I have explained so far represent a good starting point for prototyping a network, when you need to switch to production environments or take advantage of the most recent and advanced hardware capabilities of your GPU, well... in all those cases, you would like to do something more.  

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