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Data mining / practical machine learning tools and techniques.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: The Morgan Kaufmann series in data management systemsPublication details: Burlington, MA : Morgan Kaufmann, c2011.Edition: 3rd ed. / Ian H. Witten, Frank Eibe, Mark A. HallISBN:
  • 0123748569 (pbk.)
  • 9780123748560 (pbk.)
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: PART I: Machine Learning Tools and Techniques. Ch 1. What's It All About? Ch 2. Input: Concepts, Instances, Attributes. Ch 3. Output: Knowledge Representation. Ch 4. Algorithms: The Basic Methods. Ch 5. Credibility: Evaluating What's Been Learned. PART II: Advanced Data Mining.Ch 6. Implementations: Real Machine Learning Schemes. Ch 7. Data Transformation. Ch 8. Ensemble Learning. Ch 9. Moving On: Applications and Beyond. PART III: The Weka Data MiningWorkbench. Ch 10. Introduction to Weka. Ch 11. The Explorer. Ch 12. The Knowledge Flow Interface. Ch 13. The Experimenter. Ch 14 The Command-Line Interface. Ch 15. Embedded Machine Learning. Ch 16. Writing New Learning Schemes. Ch 17. Tutorial Exercises for the Weka Explorer.
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques, Third Edition , offers a thorough grounding in machine learning concepts as well as practical advice on applying machine learning tools and techniques in real-world data mining situations. This highly anticipated third edition of the most acclaimed work on data mining and machine learning will teach you everything you need to know about preparing inputs, interpreting outputs, evaluating results, and the algorithmic methods at the heart of successful data mining.

Thorough updates reflect the technical changes and modernizations that have taken place in the field since the last edition, including new material on Data Transformations, Ensemble Learning, Massive Data Sets, Multi-instance Learning, plus a new version of the popular Weka machine learning software developed by the authors. Witten, Frank, and Hall include both tried-and-true techniques of today as well as methods at the leading edge of contemporary research.

The book is targeted at information systems practitioners, programmers, consultants, developers, information technology managers, specification writers, data analysts, data modelers, database R&D professionals, data warehouse engineers, data mining professionals. The book will also be useful for professors and students of upper-level undergraduate and graduate-level data mining and machine learning courses who want to incorporate data mining as part of their data management knowledge base and expertise.

Machine generated contents note: PART I: Machine Learning Tools and Techniques. Ch 1. What's It All About? Ch 2. Input: Concepts, Instances, Attributes. Ch 3. Output: Knowledge Representation. Ch 4. Algorithms: The Basic Methods. Ch 5. Credibility: Evaluating What's Been Learned. PART II: Advanced Data Mining.Ch 6. Implementations: Real Machine Learning Schemes. Ch 7. Data Transformation. Ch 8. Ensemble Learning. Ch 9. Moving On: Applications and Beyond. PART III: The Weka Data MiningWorkbench. Ch 10. Introduction to Weka. Ch 11. The Explorer. Ch 12. The Knowledge Flow Interface. Ch 13. The Experimenter. Ch 14 The Command-Line Interface. Ch 15. Embedded Machine Learning. Ch 16. Writing New Learning Schemes. Ch 17. Tutorial Exercises for the Weka Explorer.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Part I Machine Learning Tools and Techniques
  • Ch 1 What's It All About?
  • Ch 2 Input: Concepts, Instances, Attributes
  • Ch 3 Output: Knowledge Representation: Algorithms
  • Ch 4 The Basic Methods
  • Ch 5 Credibility: Evaluating What's Been Learned
  • Ch 6 Implementations: Real Machine Learning Schemes
  • Ch 7 Data Transformation
  • Ch 8 Ensemble Learning
  • Ch 9 Massive Data Sets
  • Ch 10 Practical Data Mining
  • Part II The Weka Machine Learning Workbench
  • Ch 11 Intro to Weka
  • Ch 12 The Explorer
  • Ch 13 The Knowledge Flow Interface
  • Ch 14 The Experimenter
  • Ch 15 The Command-Line Interface
  • Ch 16 Embedded Machine Learning
  • Ch 17 Writing New Learning Schemes

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Ian H. Witten is a professor of computer science at the University of Waikato in New Zealand. He directs the New Zealand Digital Library research project. His research interests include information retrieval, machine learning, text compression, and programming by demonstration. He received an MA in Mathematics from Cambridge University, England; an MSc in Computer Science from the University of Calgary, Canada; and a PhD in Electrical Engineering from Essex University, England. He is a fellow of the ACM and of the Royal Society of New Zealand. He has published widely on digital libraries, machine learning, text compression, hypertext, speech synthesis and signal processing, and computer typography. He has written several books, the latest being Managing Gigabytes (1999) and Data Mining (2000), both from Morgan Kaufmann.

Eibe Frank lives in New Zealand with his Samoan spouse and two lovely boys, but originally hails from Germany, where he received his first degree in computer science from the University of Karlsruhe. He moved to New Zealand to pursue his Ph.D. in machine learning under the supervision of Ian H. Witten, and joined the Department of Computer Science at the University of Waikato as a lecturer on completion of his studies. He is now an associate professor at the same institution. As an early adopter of the Java programming language, he laid the groundwork for the Weka software described in this book. He has contributed a number of publications on machine learning and data mining to the literature and has refereed for many conferences and journals in these areas.>

Mark A. Hall holds a bachelor's degree in computing and mathematical sciences and a Ph.D. in computer science, both from the University of Waikato. Throughout his time at Waikato, as a student and lecturer in computer science and more recently as a software developer and data mining consultant for Pentaho, an open-source business intelligence software company, Mark has been a core contributor to the Weka software described in this book. He has published a number of articles on machine learning and data mining and has refereed for conferences and journals in these areas.

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