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15 Math Concepts Every Data Scientist Should Know

You're reading from   15 Math Concepts Every Data Scientist Should Know Understand and learn how to apply the math behind data science algorithms

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837634187
Length 510 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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David Hoyle David Hoyle
Author Profile Icon David Hoyle
David Hoyle
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Essential Concepts
2. Chapter 1: Recap of Mathematical Notation and Terminology FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Random Variables and Probability Distributions 4. Chapter 3: Matrices and Linear Algebra 5. Chapter 4: Loss Functions and Optimization 6. Chapter 5: Probabilistic Modeling 7. Part 2: Intermediate Concepts
8. Chapter 6: Time Series and Forecasting 9. Chapter 7: Hypothesis Testing 10. Chapter 8: Model Complexity 11. Chapter 9: Function Decomposition 12. Chapter 10: Network Analysis 13. Part 3: Selected Advanced Concepts
14. Chapter 11: Dynamical Systems 15. Chapter 12: Kernel Methods 16. Chapter 13: Information Theory 17. Chapter 14: Non-Parametric Bayesian Methods 18. Chapter 15: Random Matrices 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Gradient descent

As we just hinted at the end of the last section, we aren’t always in a position where we can use the closed-form OLS solution of Eq. 20. What are our options? To construct a more general approach to empirical risk minimization, we’ll have to revisit the shape of the empirical risk function so that we can understand how to locate its minima.

Locating the minimum of a simple risk function

To understand the shape of the empirical risk function, let’s take a simple example with a model that has a single parameter. We’ll use the risk function for a linear model and a squared-loss function. We’ll use a linear model with a single feature, and so it is of the following form:

<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="block"><mrow><mrow><mover><mi>y</mi><mo stretchy="true">ˆ</mo></mover><mo>=</mo><mspace width="0.25em" /><mi>β</mi><mi>x</mi></mrow></mrow></math>

Eq. 23

The model has a single parameter, β, which multiplies the single feature x. In Figure 4.7 we have plotted the shape of the empirical risk function against the value of β, and where we have calculated the empirical risk on a dataset...

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