Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

October 3, 2011

Algorithms of the Intelligent Web Review

Algorithms of the Intelligent Web Review by Pearlene McKinley

From the post:

I have always had an interest in AI, machine learning, and data mining but I found the introductory books too mathematical and focused mostly on solving academic problems rather than real-world industrial problems. So, I was curious to see what this book was about.

I have read the book front-to-back (twice!) before I write this report. I started reading the electronic version a couple of months ago and read the paper print again over the weekend. This is the best practical book in machine learning that you can buy today — period. All the examples are written in Java and all algorithms are explained in plain English. The writing style is superb! The book was written by one author (Marmanis) while the other one (Babenko) contributed in the source code, so there are no gaps in the narrative; it is engaging, pleasant, and fluent. The author leads the reader from the very introductory concepts to some fairly advanced topics. Some of the topics are covered in the book and some are left as an exercise at the end of each chapter (there is a “To Do” section, which was a wonderful idea!). I did not like some of the figures (they were probably made by the authors not an artist) but this was only a minor aesthetic inconvenience.

The book covers four cornerstones of machine learning and intelligence, i.e. intelligent search, recommendations, clustering, and classification. It also covers a subject that today you can find only in the academic literature, i.e. combination techniques. Combination techniques are very powerful and although the author presents the techniques in the context of classifiers, it is clear that the same can be done for recommendations — as the Bell Korr team did for the Netflix prize.

Wonder if this will be useful in the Stanford AI course that starts next week with more than 130,000 students? Introduction to Artificial Intelligence – Stanford Class

I am going to order a copy, if for no other reason than to evaluate the reviewer’s claim of explanations “in plain English.” I have seen some fairly clever explanations of AI algorithms and would like to see how these stack up.

No Comments

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Powered by WordPress