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Bayesian Analysis with Python

You're reading from   Bayesian Analysis with Python A practical guide to probabilistic modeling

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805127161
Length 394 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Osvaldo Martin Osvaldo Martin
Author Profile Icon Osvaldo Martin
Osvaldo Martin
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Chapter 1 Thinking Probabilistically 2. Chapter 2 Programming Probabilistically FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3 Hierarchical Models 4. Chapter 4 Modeling with Lines 5. Chapter 5 Comparing Models 6. Chapter 6 Modeling with Bambi 7. Chapter 7 Mixture Models 8. Chapter 8 Gaussian Processes 9. Chapter 9 Bayesian Additive Regression Trees 10. Chapter 10 Inference Engines 11. Chapter 11 Where to Go Next 12. Bibliography
13. Other Books You May Enjoy
14. Index

8.1 Linear models and non-linear data

In Chapter 4 and Chapter 6 we learned how to build models of the general form:

θ = 𝜓 (ϕ(X )𝛽 )

Here, θ is a parameter for some probability distribution, for example, the mean of a Gaussian, the p parameter of the binomial, the rate of a Poisson, and so on. We call the inverse link function and is some other function we use to potentially transform the data, like a square root, a polynomial function, or something else.

Fitting, or learning, a Bayesian model can be seen as finding the posterior distribution of the weights β, and thus this is known as the weight view of approximating functions. As we already saw with polynomial and splines regression, by letting be a non-linear function, we can map the inputs onto a feature space. We also saw that by using a polynomial of the proper degree, we can perfectly fit any function. But unless we apply some form of regularization, for example, using prior distributions, this will lead to models that memorize...

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