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Principles of Data Science

You're reading from   Principles of Data Science Mathematical techniques and theory to succeed in data-driven industries

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785887918
Length 388 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Sinan Ozdemir Sinan Ozdemir
Author Profile Icon Sinan Ozdemir
Sinan Ozdemir
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. How to Sound Like a Data Scientist 2. Types of Data FREE CHAPTER 3. The Five Steps of Data Science 4. Basic Mathematics 5. Impossible or Improbable – A Gentle Introduction to Probability 6. Advanced Probability 7. Basic Statistics 8. Advanced Statistics 9. Communicating Data 10. How to Tell If Your Toaster Is Learning – Machine Learning Essentials 11. Predictions Don't Grow on Trees – or Do They? 12. Beyond the Essentials 13. Case Studies Index

Bayesian ideas revisited


In the last chapter, we talked, very briefly, about Bayesian ways of thinking. In short, when speaking about Bayes, you are speaking about the following three things and how they all interact with each other:

  • A prior distribution

  • A posterior distribution

  • A likelihood

Basically, we are concerned with finding the posterior. That's the thing we want to know.

Another way to phrase the Bayesian way of thinking is that data shapes and updates our belief. We have a prior probability, or what we naively think about a hypothesis, and then we have a posterior probability, which is what we think about a hypothesis, given some data.

Bayes theorem

Bayes theorem is the big result of Bayesian inference. Let's see how it even comes about. Recall that we previously defined the following:

  • P(A) = The probability that event A occurs

  • P(A|B) = The probability that A occurs, given that B occurred

  • P(A, B) = The probability that A and B occurs

  • P(A, B) = P(A) * P(B|A)

That last bullet can be read as...

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