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Data Analysis with R, Second Edition

You're reading from   Data Analysis with R, Second Edition A comprehensive guide to manipulating, analyzing, and visualizing data in R

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788393720
Length 570 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Tony Fischetti Tony Fischetti
Author Profile Icon Tony Fischetti
Tony Fischetti
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. RefresheR FREE CHAPTER 2. The Shape of Data 3. Describing Relationships 4. Probability 5. Using Data To Reason About The World 6. Testing Hypotheses 7. Bayesian Methods 8. The Bootstrap 9. Predicting Continuous Variables 10. Predicting Categorical Variables 11. Predicting Changes with Time 12. Sources of Data 13. Dealing with Missing Data 14. Dealing with Messy Data 15. Dealing with Large Data 16. Working with Popular R Packages 17. Reproducibility and Best Practices 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

The bias-variance trade-off


In statistical learning, the bias of a model refers to the error of the model introduced by attempting to model a complicated real-life relationship with an approximation. A model with no bias will never make any errors in prediction (like the cookie-area prediction problem). A model with high bias will fail to accurately predict its dependent variable.

Figure 9.9: The two extremes of the bias-variance trade-off: a complicated model with essentially zero bias (on training data) but enormous variance (left), a simple model with high bias but virtually no variance (right)

The variance of a model refers to how sensitive a model is to changes in the data that built the model. A model with low variance would change very little when built with new data. A linear model with high variance is very sensitive to changes to the data that it was built with, and the estimated coefficients will be unstable.

The term bias-variance trade-off illustrates that it is easy to decrease...

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