[ml] Stanford Machine Learning Course CS229

Thomas Lotze thomas.lotze at gmail.com
Thu Aug 19 23:24:00 UTC 2010


Joe,

This sounds like a great idea.  I'm definitely interested.

-Thomas

On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Joe Hale <joe at jjhale.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I was wondering if anyone out there wanted to form a study group to
> work through the Stanford Machine learning course. The videos of the
> lectures are on iTunesU and all the handouts and problem sets are
> online.
>
> The course consists of 20 lectures which are 1h 15m long each. I've
> pasted the syllabus at the end. It seems like it would provide a
> really solid foundation for future ML projects at Noisebridge for
> those interested in getting into ML but who maybe didn't get round to
> studying it at school.
>
> I figure we'd watch lectures on our own time and get together to
> discuss them and the problem sets.
>
> Let me know if you'd be interested.
>
> - Joe Hale
>
> :::The course details:::
>
> Machine Learning CS229
> http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs229/
>
> Course Description
>
> This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning and
> statistical pattern recognition. Topics include: supervised learning
> (generative/discriminative learning, parametric/non-parametric
> learning, neural networks, support vector machines); unsupervised
> learning (clustering, dimensionality reduction, kernel methods);
> learning theory (bias/variance tradeoffs; VC theory; large margins);
> reinforcement learning and adaptive control. The course will also
> discuss recent applications of machine learning, such as to robotic
> control, data mining, autonomous navigation, bioinformatics, speech
> recognition, and text and web data processing.
>
> Prerequisites
>
> Students are expected to have the following background:
> Knowledge of basic computer science principles and skills, at a level
> sufficient to write a reasonably non-trivial computer program.
> Familiarity with the basic probability theory. (CS109 or Stat116 is
> sufficient but not necessary.)
> Familiarity with the basic linear algebra (any one of Math 51, Math
> 103, Math 113, or CS 205 would be much more than necessary.)
>
> Course Materials
> There is no required text for this course. Notes will be posted
> periodically on the course web site. The following books are
> recommended as optional reading:
>
> Syllabus
> Introduction (1 class)
> Basic concepts.
>
> Supervised learning. (7 classes)
> Supervised learning setup. LMS.
> Logistic regression. Perceptron. Exponential family.
> Generative learning algorithms. Gaussian discriminant analysis. Naive
> Bayes.
> Support vector machines.
> Model selection and feature selection.
> Ensemble methods: Bagging, boosting, ECOC.
> Evaluating and debugging learning algorithms.
>
> Learning theory. (3 classes)
> Bias/variance tradeoff. Union and Chernoff/Hoeffding bounds.
> VC dimension. Worst case (online) learning.
> Practical advice on how to use learning algorithms.
>
> Unsupervised learning. (5 classes)
> Clustering. K-means.
> EM. Mixture of Gaussians.
> Factor analysis.
> PCA. MDS. pPCA.
> Independent components analysis (ICA).
>
> Reinforcement learning and control. (4 classes)
> MDPs. Bellman equations.
> Value iteration and policy iteration.
> Linear quadratic regulation (LQR). LQG.
> Q-learning. Value function approximation.
> Policy search. Reinforce. POMDPs.
> _______________________________________________
> ml mailing list
> ml at lists.noisebridge.net
> https://www.noisebridge.net/mailman/listinfo/ml
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://www.noisebridge.net/pipermail/ml/attachments/20100819/4611221f/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the ml mailing list