Difference between revisions of "10-601 Logistic Regression"
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* Optional: | * Optional: | ||
** Murphy 8.1-3, 8.6 | ** Murphy 8.1-3, 8.6 | ||
− | ** [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-605/notes/sgd-notes.pdf William's notes on SGD | + | ** [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~wcohen/10-605/notes/sgd-notes.pdf William's notes on SGD] sec 1-3 |
** [http://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~elkan/250B/logreg.pdf Charles Elkan's notes on SGD] | ** [http://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~elkan/250B/logreg.pdf Charles Elkan's notes on SGD] | ||
Revision as of 15:15, 6 January 2016
This a lecture used in the Syllabus for Machine Learning 10-601B in Spring 2016
Slides
- William's lecture: in Powerpoint
Readings
- Optional:
- Murphy 8.1-3, 8.6
- William's notes on SGD sec 1-3
- Charles Elkan's notes on SGD
What You Should Know Afterward
- How to implement logistic regression.
- How to determine the best parameters for logistic regression models
- Why regularization matters for logistic regression.
- How logistic regression and naive Bayes are similar and different.
- The difference between a discriminative and a generative classifier.
- What "overfitting" is, and why optimizing performance on a training set does not necessarily lead to good performance on a test set.