Difference between revisions of "10-601 Linear Regression"

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This a lecture used in the [[Syllabus for Machine Learning 10-601 in Fall 2014]]
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This a lecture used in the [[Syllabus for Machine Learning 10-601B in Spring 2016]]
  
 
=== Slides ===
 
=== Slides ===
* Ziv's lecture: [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~zivbj/classF14/RegNew.pdf Slides in pdf].
 
  
 
* William's lecture: [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-601/linear-regression.ppt Slides in Powerpoint], [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-601/linear-regression.pdf in PDF].
 
* William's lecture: [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-601/linear-regression.ppt Slides in Powerpoint], [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-601/linear-regression.pdf in PDF].
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* Side note: The [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-601/bias-variance.ppt bias-variance decomposition].
  
 
=== Readings ===
 
=== Readings ===
  
 
* Mitchell 4.1-4.3
 
* Mitchell 4.1-4.3
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* Murphy: 7.1-7.3, 7.5.1
 
* Optional:
 
* Optional:
 
** Bishop 3.1
 
** Bishop 3.1
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** There's also a nice but somewhat less technical [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQWI1kvmwRg video lecture] on overfitting and bias-variance
  
 
=== What You Should Know Afterward ===
 
=== What You Should Know Afterward ===

Latest revision as of 11:11, 27 January 2016

This a lecture used in the Syllabus for Machine Learning 10-601B in Spring 2016

Slides

Readings

  • Mitchell 4.1-4.3
  • Murphy: 7.1-7.3, 7.5.1
  • Optional:
    • Bishop 3.1
    • There's also a nice but somewhat less technical video lecture on overfitting and bias-variance

What You Should Know Afterward

  • Regression vs. classification
  • Solving regression problems with 1 and 2 variables
  • Ordinary least squares (OLS) solution (aka normal equations) to linear regression problems
  • Gradient descent approach to linear regression
  • Data transformation and its impact on the way linear regression is solved, and the expressiveness of LR models