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Hands-On Data Science and Python Machine Learning

Hands-On Data Science and Python Machine Learning

By : Frank Kane
3.8 (4)
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Hands-On Data Science and Python Machine Learning

Hands-On Data Science and Python Machine Learning

3.8 (4)
By: Frank Kane

Overview of this book

Join Frank Kane, who worked on Amazon and IMDb’s machine learning algorithms, as he guides you on your first steps into the world of data science. Hands-On Data Science and Python Machine Learning gives you the tools that you need to understand and explore the core topics in the field, and the confidence and practice to build and analyze your own machine learning models. With the help of interesting and easy-to-follow practical examples, Frank Kane explains potentially complex topics such as Bayesian methods and K-means clustering in a way that anybody can understand them. Based on Frank’s successful data science course, Hands-On Data Science and Python Machine Learning empowers you to conduct data analysis and perform efficient machine learning using Python. Let Frank help you unearth the value in your data using the various data mining and data analysis techniques available in Python, and to develop efficient predictive models to predict future results. You will also learn how to perform large-scale machine learning on Big Data using Apache Spark. The book covers preparing your data for analysis, training machine learning models, and visualizing the final data analysis.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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Polynomial regression

We've talked about linear regression where we fit a straight line to a set of observations. Polynomial regression is our next topic, and that's using higher order polynomials to fit your data. So, sometimes your data might not really be appropriate for a straight line. That's where polynomial regression comes in.

Polynomial regression is a more general case of regression. So why limit yourself to a straight line? Maybe your data doesn't actually have a linear relationship, or maybe there's some sort of a curve to it, right? That happens pretty frequently.

Not all relationships are linear, but the linear regression is just one example of a whole class of regressions that we can do. If you remember the linear regression line that we ended up with was of the form y = mx + b, where we got back the values m and b from our linear regression...

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