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Hands-On Ensemble Learning with R

Hands-On Ensemble Learning with R

By : Tattar
3 (1)
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Hands-On Ensemble Learning with R

Hands-On Ensemble Learning with R

3 (1)
By: Tattar

Overview of this book

Ensemble techniques are used for combining two or more similar or dissimilar machine learning algorithms to create a stronger model. Such a model delivers superior prediction power and can give your datasets a boost in accuracy. Hands-On Ensemble Learning with R begins with the important statistical resampling methods. You will then walk through the central trilogy of ensemble techniques – bagging, random forest, and boosting – then you'll learn how they can be used to provide greater accuracy on large datasets using popular R packages. You will learn how to combine model predictions using different machine learning algorithms to build ensemble models. In addition to this, you will explore how to improve the performance of your ensemble models. By the end of this book, you will have learned how machine learning algorithms can be combined to reduce common problems and build simple efficient ensemble models with the help of real-world examples.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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12
12. What's Next?
13
A. Bibliography
14
Index

The jackknife technique

Quenouille (1949) invented the jackknife technique. The purpose of this was to reduce bias by looking at multiple samples of data in a methodical way. The name jackknife seems to have been coined by the well-known statistician John W. Tukey. Due mainly to the lack of computational power, the advances and utility of the jackknife method were restricted. Efron invented the bootstrap method in 1979 (see the following section for its applications) and established the connection with the jackknife method. In fact, these two methods have a lot in common and are generally put under the umbrella of resampling methods.

Suppose that we draw a random sample The jackknife techniqueof size n from a probability distribution F, and we denote by The jackknife technique the parameter of interest. Let The jackknife technique be an estimator of The jackknife technique, and here we don't have the probability distribution of The jackknife technique for a given The jackknife technique. Resampling methods will help in carrying out statistical inference when the probability distribution is unknown. A formal definition...

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