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Bayesian Analysis with Python

Bayesian Analysis with Python

By : Osvaldo Martin
3.2 (17)
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Bayesian Analysis with Python

Bayesian Analysis with Python

3.2 (17)
By: Osvaldo Martin

Overview of this book

The second edition of Bayesian Analysis with Python is an introduction to the main concepts of applied Bayesian inference and its practical implementation in Python using PyMC3, a state-of-the-art probabilistic programming library, and ArviZ, a new library for exploratory analysis of Bayesian models. The main concepts of Bayesian statistics are covered using a practical and computational approach. Synthetic and real data sets are used to introduce several types of models, such as generalized linear models for regression and classification, mixture models, hierarchical models, and Gaussian processes, among others. By the end of the book, you will have a working knowledge of probabilistic modeling and you will be able to design and implement Bayesian models for your own data science problems. After reading the book you will be better prepared to delve into more advanced material or specialized statistical modeling if you need to.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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9
Where To Go Next?

Robust logistic regression

We just saw how to fix an excess of zeros without directly modeling the factor that generates them. A similar approach, suggested by Kruschke, can be used to perform a more robust version of logistic regression. Remember that in logistic regression, we model the data as binomial, that is, zeros and ones. So it may happen that we find a dataset with unusual zeros and/or ones. Take, as an example, the iris dataset that we already saw, but with some added intruders:

iris = sns.load_dataset("iris") 
df = iris.query("species == ('setosa', 'versicolor')")
y_0 = pd.Categorical(df['species']).codes
x_n = 'sepal_length'
x_0 = df[x_n].values
y_0 = np.concatenate((y_0, np.ones(6, dtype=int)))
x_0 = np.concatenate((x_0, [4.2, 4.5, 4.0, 4.3, 4.2, 4.4]))
x_c = x_0 - x_0.mean()
plt.plot(x_c, y_0, 'o&apos...
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