ISBN-13: 9783030023836 / Angielski / Twarda / 2018 / 423 str.
This book provides a 'one-stop source' for all readers who are interested in a new, empirical approach to machine learning that, unlike traditional methods, successfully addresses the demands of today's data-driven world. After an introduction to the fundamentals, the book discusses in depth anomaly detection, data partitioning and clustering, as well as classification and predictors. It describes classifiers of zero and first order, and the new, highly efficient and transparent deep rule-based classifiers, particularly highlighting their applications to image processing. Local optimality and stability conditions for the methods presented are formally derived and stated, while the software is also provided as supplemental, open-source material. The book will greatly benefit postgraduate students, researchers and practitioners dealing with advanced data processing, applied mathematicians, software developers of agent-oriented systems, and developers of embedded and real-time systems. It can also be used as a textbook for postgraduate coursework; for this purpose, a standalone set of lecture notes and corresponding lab session notes are available on the same website as the code. The book Empirical Approach to Machine Learning opens new horizons to automated and efficient data processing. Dimitar Filev, Henry Ford Technical Fellow, Ford Motor Company, USA I owe great thanks to Professor Plamen Angelov for making this important material available to the community just as I see great practical needs for it, in the new area of making real sense of high-speed data from the brain. Paul J. Werbos, Inventor of the back-propagation method, USA This new book will set up a milestone for the modern intelligent systems. Chin-Teng Lin, Distinguished Prof., University of Technology Sydney, Australia Empirical Approach to Machine Learning provides an insightful and visionary boost of progress in the evolution of computational learning capabilities yielding interpretable and transparent implementations. Edward Tunstel, President of IEEE Systems, Man, Cybernetics Society, USA