Pattern Classification, Part 1This unique text/professional reference provides the information you need to choose the most appropriate method for a given class of problems, presenting an in-depth, systematic account of the major topics in pattern recognition today. A new edition of a classic work that helped define the field for over a quarter century, this practical book updates and expands the original work, focusing on pattern classification and the immense progress it has experienced in recent years."--BOOK JACKET. |
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Page 85
... methods view the parameters as quantities whose values are fixed but unknown . The best estimate of their value is defined to be the one that maximizes the probabil- ity of obtaining the samples actually observed . In contrast ...
... methods view the parameters as quantities whose values are fixed but unknown . The best estimate of their value is defined to be the one that maximizes the probabil- ity of obtaining the samples actually observed . In contrast ...
Page 381
... methods are unlikely to work , we may employ stochastic techniques - ones that at some level rely on randomness to find model parameters . Simulated annealing , based on physical annealing of metals , con- sists in randomly perturbing ...
... methods are unlikely to work , we may employ stochastic techniques - ones that at some level rely on randomness to find model parameters . Simulated annealing , based on physical annealing of metals , con- sists in randomly perturbing ...
Page 581
... method of multiple discriminant analysis described in Chapter 3 . There is a large body of theory on methods of dimensionality reduction for pattern classification . Some of these methods seek to form new features out of linear combi ...
... method of multiple discriminant analysis described in Chapter 3 . There is a large body of theory on methods of dimensionality reduction for pattern classification . Some of these methods seek to form new features out of linear combi ...
Contents
MAXIMUMLIKELIHOOD AND BAYESIAN | 84 |
NONPARAMETRIC TECHNIQUES | 161 |
LINEAR DISCRIMINANT FUNCTIONS | 215 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
Computer Manual in MATLAB to accompany Pattern Classification David G. Stork,Elad Yom-Tov No preview available - 2004 |
Computer Manual in MATLAB to accompany Pattern Classification David G. Stork,Elad Yom-Tov No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
analysis approach assume backpropagation Bayes Bayesian bias binary Boltzmann calculate Chapter cluster centers component classifiers Consider convergence corresponding covariance matrix criterion function d-dimensional data set decision boundary denote derivation discriminant function distance distribution entropy error rate feature space FIGURE Gaussian given gradient descent Hidden Markov Models hidden units independent input iteration jackknife estimate labeled large number learning algorithm maximum-likelihood estimate mean methods minimize minimum minimum description length mixture density nearest-neighbor neural networks node nonlinear normal number of clusters number of samples obtain optimal output units p(xw parameters pattern recognition Perceptron points prior probabilities probability density problem procedure random variables randomly Section sequence shown shows simple solution split statistical statistically independent string Suppose target tion training data training error training patterns training set tree two-category unsupervised learning variance w₁ weight vector x₁ zero