Book Image

Numerical Computing with Python

By : Pratap Dangeti, Allen Yu, Claire Chung, Aldrin Yim, Theodore Petrou
Book Image

Numerical Computing with Python

By: Pratap Dangeti, Allen Yu, Claire Chung, Aldrin Yim, Theodore Petrou

Overview of this book

Data mining, or parsing the data to extract useful insights, is a niche skill that can transform your career as a data scientist Python is a flexible programming language that is equipped with a strong suite of libraries and toolkits, and gives you the perfect platform to sift through your data and mine the insights you seek. This Learning Path is designed to familiarize you with the Python libraries and the underlying statistics that you need to get comfortable with data mining. You will learn how to use Pandas, Python's popular library to analyze different kinds of data, and leverage the power of Matplotlib to generate appealing and impressive visualizations for the insights you have derived. You will also explore different machine learning techniques and statistics that enable you to build powerful predictive models. By the end of this Learning Path, you will have the perfect foundation to take your data mining skills to the next level and set yourself on the path to become a sought-after data science professional. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: • Statistics for Machine Learning by Pratap Dangeti • Matplotlib 2.x By Example by Allen Yu, Claire Chung, Aldrin Yim • Pandas Cookbook by Theodore Petrou
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page
Contributors
About Packt
Preface
Index

Understanding Bayes theorem with conditional probability


Conditional probability provides a way of calculating relationships between dependent events using Bayes theorem. For example, A and B are two events and we would like to calculate P(A\B) can be read as the probability of an event occurring A given the fact that event B already occurred, in fact, this is known as conditional probability, the equation can be written as follows:

To understand better, we will now talk about the email classification example. Our objective is to predict whether an email is a spam given the word lottery and some other clues. In this case, we already knew the overall probability of spam, which is 10 percent also known as prior probability. Now suppose you have obtained an additional piece of information that probability of word lottery in all messages, which is 4 percent, also known as marginal likelihood. Now, we know the probability that lottery was used in previous spam messages and is called the likelihood...