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Principles of Data Mining

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Author:

Max Bramer

Number Of Downloads:

78

Number Of Reads:

11

Language:

English

File Size:

4.23 MB

Category:

Technology

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Pages:

530

Quality:

good

Views:

1360

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Book Description

This book explains and explores the main techniques of data mining, the automatic extraction of useful implicit and potentially useful information from data, which are increasingly used in commercial, scientific, and other applications. It focuses on classification and mining of link and agglomeration bases. Each topic is clearly explained, with an emphasis on algorithms rather than mathematical formalism, and is illustrated through detailed practical examples. The book is written for readers who do not have a strong background in mathematics or statistics and any formulas used are explained in detail. It can be used as a textbook to support undergraduate or graduate courses in a wide range of subjects including computer science, business studies, marketing, artificial intelligence, bioinformatics, and forensic science. As a self-study aid, this book is intended to help readers in general develop the necessary understanding of what is inside the "black box" so that they can discriminately use commercial data mining packages, as well as to enable advanced readers or academic researchers to understand or contribute to technical advances future in this field. Each chapter contains practical exercises to enable readers to check their progress. A full glossary of technical terms used is included. This expanded third edition includes detailed descriptions of algorithms for classifying data flows, both static data, where the base model is fixed, and time-dependent data, where the base model changes from time to time - a phenomenon known as concept skew.
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Max Bramer

Professor Emeritus of Information Technology, University of Portsmouth, UK Honorary Secretary of the International Information Processing Union Chair of the Artificial Intelligence Specialty Group at the British Computer Society Formerly Professor of Digital IT and Head of the Department of Information Science at the University of Portsmouth, UK, Director of the Knowledge Engineering Program, Hewlett-Labs Packard, Bristol, Chair, School of Computing and Information Technology, Thames Polytechnic (now University of Greenwich), East Midlands Regional Director, DES Microelectronics in Education Program, Lecturer in Computer Science, The Open University,

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