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Practical Big Data Analytics

You're reading from   Practical Big Data Analytics Hands-on techniques to implement enterprise analytics and machine learning using Hadoop, Spark, NoSQL and R

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783554393
Length 412 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Nataraj Dasgupta Nataraj Dasgupta
Author Profile Icon Nataraj Dasgupta
Nataraj Dasgupta
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Too Big or Not Too Big FREE CHAPTER 2. Big Data Mining for the Masses 3. The Analytics Toolkit 4. Big Data With Hadoop 5. Big Data Mining with NoSQL 6. Spark for Big Data Analytics 7. An Introduction to Machine Learning Concepts 8. Machine Learning Deep Dive 9. Enterprise Data Science 10. Closing Thoughts on Big Data 11. External Data Science Resources 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

The gradient descent and VC Dimension theories


Gradient descent and VC Dimension are two fundamental theories in machine learning. In general, gradient descent gives a structured approach to finding the optimal co-efficients of a function. The hypothesis space of a function can be large and with gradient descent, the algorithm tries to find a minimum (a minima) where the cost function (for example, the squared sum of errors) is the lowest.

VC Dimension provides an upper bound on the maximum number of points that can be classified in a system. It is in essence the measure of the richness of a function and provides an assessment of what the limits of a hypothesis are in a structured way. The number of points that can be exactly classified by a function or hypothesis is known as the VC Dimension of the hypothesis. For example, a linear boundary can accurately classify 2 or 3 points but not 4. Hence, the VC Dimension of this 2-dimensional space would be 3.

VC Dimension, like many other topics...

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