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Time Series Analysis with Python Cookbook

You're reading from   Time Series Analysis with Python Cookbook Practical recipes for exploratory data analysis, data preparation, forecasting, and model evaluation

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2025
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781805124283
Length 98 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Tarek A. Atwan Tarek A. Atwan
Author Profile Icon Tarek A. Atwan
Tarek A. Atwan
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

1. Time Series Analysis with Python Cookbook, Second Edition: Practical recipes for exploratory data analysis, data preparation, forecasting, and model evaluation FREE CHAPTER
2. Getting Started with Time Series Analysis 3. Reading Time Series Data from Files 4. Reading Time Series Data from Databases 5. Persisting Time Series Data to Files 6. Persisting Time Series Data to Databases 7. Working with Date and Time in Python 8. Handling Missing Data 9. Outlier Detection Using Statistical Methods 10. Exploratory Data Analysis and Diagnosis 11. Building Univariate Time Series Models Using Statistical Methods 12. Additional Statistical Modeling Techniques for Time Series 13. Outlier Detection Using Unsupervised Machine Learning

Understanding outliers

The presence of outliers requires special handling and further investigation before hastily jumping to decisions on how to handle them. First, you will need to detect and spot their existence, which this chapter is all about. Domain knowledge can be instrumental in determining whether these identified points are outliers, their impact on your analysis, and how you should deal with them.

Outliers can indicate bad data due to a random variation in the process, known as noise, or due to data entry error, faulty sensors, bad experiment, or natural variation. Outliers are usually undesirable if they seem synthetic, for example, bad data. On the other hand, if outliers are a natural part of the process, you may need to rethink removing them and opt to keep these data points. In such circumstances, you can rely on non-parametric statistical methods that do not make assumptions on the underlying distribution.

Generally, outliers can cause side effects when building a model...

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