% A few local macros that are used by the example content. \newcommand{\expect}[2]{\mathds{E}_{{#1}} \left[ {#2} \right]} \newcommand{\myvec}[1]{\boldsymbol{#1}} \newcommand{\myvecsym}[1]{\boldsymbol{#1}} \newcommand{\vx}{\myvec{x}} \newcommand{\vy}{\myvec{y}} \newcommand{\vz}{\myvec{z}} \newcommand{\vtheta}{\myvecsym{\theta}} \section{Introduction} \kant[1] \kant[2] \kant[3] \section{Using Figures} % We can add figures in the usual way. Figure \ref{fig:image1}. \begin{figure}[t] \centering \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{kurt-cotoaga-1210012-unsplash} \caption{Image. This image comes from unsplash.com, which is a great website to get free to use high quality images.} \label{fig:image1} \end{figure} \section{Latex Environments} Using paragraph environment. \paragraph{Opening Paragraph.} Paragraph is a way to have a bolded heading, and that can also enter into the pdf bookmark structure. \section{Equations} % We can write equations this way: \begin{align} \log p(\vx) & = \log \int p_\theta(\vx,\vz) p(\vz) d\vz \nonumber \\ & = \log \expect{p(\vz)}{p_\theta(\vx,\vz)} \label{eq:marginalisation1} \end{align} We refer to the previous equation \eqref{eq:marginalisation1}. Later let's compute the gradient $\nabla_\theta \log p(\vx)$. The commands \verb|\vz|, \verb|\vx|, \verb|\expect| are locally-defined macros. The file \texttt{defns.tex} provides a larger set of short macros for common constructions, but some of them clash with existing packages. \begin{align} \log p(\vx) & = \nabla_{\vtheta} \sum_{i=1}^N \log p(y | x(\vtheta)) + \mathcal{R}(x) \nonumber \\ & + \|\nabla_{\vtheta}\vx(\vtheta)\|^2_2 \\ & y \in \mathbb{R}; \vx \in \mathbb{R}^D \qquad \text{using \texttt{\textbackslash mathbb}} \\ & y \in \mathds{R}; \vx \in \mathds{R}^D \qquad \text{using \texttt{\textbackslash mathds}} \label{eq:marginalisation2} \end{align} \subsection{Tables} Use \href{https://www.tablesgenerator.com/latex_tables}{\texttt{www.tablesgenerator.com/latex\_tables}} to help make tables. \begin{table}[tb] \centering \caption{Sizes of datasets. Testing with a much longer caption to see how it looks over multiple lines. } \begin{tabular}{lll} \hline Dataset & N & D \\ \hline \hline MNIST & 60,000 & $32\times32$ \\ ImageNet & 1m & $64\times64$\\ \hline \end{tabular} \end{table} \subsubsection{Using lists} % Itemize lists \begin{itemize} \item Item 1 \item Item 2 \item Item 3 \end{itemize} \noindent Enumerate lists \begin{enumerate} \item Item 1 \item Item 2 \item Item 3 \end{enumerate} \section{DeepMind Brand Colours} The brand standard specifies a colour palette that is available using the package \texttt{dm-colors}, which is already included in this template. Colours include: \textcolor{dmblue400}{This} \textcolor{dmyellow500}{text} \textcolor{dmteal400}{is} \textcolor{dmpurple400}{rendered} \textcolor{dmred400}{using} \textcolor{dmorange400}{dmcolors}. \section{Including References and Bibliography} \begin{figure*}[t] \centering \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{kurt-cotoaga-1210012-unsplash} \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{kurt-cotoaga-1210012-unsplash} \caption{Image. This image comes from unsplash.com, which is a great website to get free to use high quality images.} \label{fig:image2} \end{figure*} References can be formatted in two styles with the \texttt{citep} command \citep{silver2016mastering} and with the \texttt{citet} command \citet{silver2016mastering}.