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Machine Learning for Finance

You're reading from   Machine Learning for Finance Principles and practice for financial insiders

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789136364
Length 456 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Jannes Klaas Jannes Klaas
Author Profile Icon Jannes Klaas
Jannes Klaas
James Le James Le
Author Profile Icon James Le
James Le
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Machine Learning for Finance
Contributors
Preface
Other Books You May Enjoy
1. Neural Networks and Gradient-Based Optimization 2. Applying Machine Learning to Structured Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Utilizing Computer Vision 4. Understanding Time Series 5. Parsing Textual Data with Natural Language Processing 6. Using Generative Models 7. Reinforcement Learning for Financial Markets 8. Privacy, Debugging, and Launching Your Products 9. Fighting Bias 10. Bayesian Inference and Probabilistic Programming Index

Using less data – active learning


Part of the motivation for generative models, be they GANs or VAEs, was always that they would allow us to generate data and therefore require less data. As data is inherently sparse, especially in finance, and we never have enough of it, generative models seem as though they are the free lunch that economists warn us about. Yet even the best GAN works with no data. In this section, we will have a look at the different methods used to bootstrap models with as little data as possible. This method is also called active learning or semi-supervised learning.

Unsupervised learning uses unlabeled data to cluster data in different ways. An example is autoencoders, where images can be transformed into learned and latent vectors, which can then be clustered without the need for labels that describe the image.

Supervised learning uses data with labels. An example is the image classifier we built in Chapter 3, Utilizing Computer Vision, or most of the other models...

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