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Getting Data Science Done outlines the essential stages in running
successful data science projects-providing comprehensive guidelines
to help you identify potential issues and then a range of
strategies for mitigating them. Data science is a field that
synthesizes statistics, computer science and business analytics to
deliver results that can impact almost any type of process or
organization. Data science is also an evolving technical
discipline, whose practice is full of pitfalls and potential
problems for managers, stakeholders and practitioners. Many
organizations struggle to consistently deliver results with data
science due to a wide range of issues, including knowledge
barriers, problem framing, organizational change and integration
with IT and engineering. Getting Data Science Done outlines the
essential stages in running successful data science projects. The
book provides comprehensive guidelines to help you identify
potential issues and then a range of strategies for mitigating
them. The book is organized as a sequential process allowing the
reader to work their way through a project from an initial idea all
the way to a deployed and integrated product.
This is an essential early Johnson biography, recovered from
obscurity and reissued in celebration of the tercentenary of
Johnson's birth. This is the first and only scholarly edition of
Sir John Hawkins' Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., a work that has
not been widely available in complete form for more than two
hundred years. Published in 1787, some four years before James
Boswell's biography of Johnson, ""Hawkins' Life"" complements,
clarifies, and often corrects numerous aspects of Boswell's Life.
Samuel Johnson (1709-84) is the most significant English writer of
the second half of the eighteenth century; indeed, this period is
widely known as the Age of Johnson. Hawkins was Johnson's friend
and legal adviser and the chief executor of his will. He knew
Johnson longer and in many respects better than other biographers,
including Boswell, who made unacknowledged use of Hawkins' Life and
helped orchestrate the critical attacks that consigned the book to
obscurity. Sir John Hawkins had special insight into Johnson's
mental states at various points in his life, his early days in
London, his association with the ""Gentleman's Magazine"", and his
political views and writings. Hawkins' use of historical and
cultural details, an uncommon literary device at the time, produced
one of the earliest 'life and times' biographies in our language. O
M Brack, Jr.'s introduction covers the history of the composition,
publication, and reception of the Life and provides a context in
which it should be read. Annotations address historical, literary,
and linguistic uncertainties, and a full textual apparatus
documents how Brack arrived at this definitive text of Hawkins'
Life.
First published in 1986, this book draws together analyses of
English and German. It defines the contrasts and similarities
between the two languages and, in particular, looks at the question
of whether contrasts in one area of the grammar is systematically
related to contrasts in another, and whether there is any
'directionality' or unity to contrast throughout grammar as a
whole. It is suggested that there is, and that English and German
can serve as a case study for a more general typology of languages
than we now have. This volume will be of interest to a wide range
of linguists, including students of Germanic languages; language
typologists; generative grammarians attempting to 'fix the
parameters' on language variation;' historical linguists; and
applied linguists.
First published in 1988, this book is concerned with the definite
and indefinite articles in English. It provides an integrated
pragmatic-semantic theory of definite and indefinite reference, on
the basis of which, many co-occurance restrictions between articles
and non-modifiers are explained. At the general theoretical level,
the book looks at the role of semantics in the prediction of all
and only the grammatical sentences of a language. At a more
particular level, it explores the nature of reference, examining an
important selection of subjects such as the contrast between
definiteness and indefiniteness, the relationship between definite
and demonstrative reference, and the relationship between pragmatic
and logical aspects of determining meaning.
First published in 1986, this book draws together analyses of
English and German. It defines the contrasts and similarities
between the two languages and, in particular, looks at the question
of whether contrasts in one area of the grammar is systematically
related to contrasts in another, and whether there is any
'directionality' or unity to contrast throughout grammar as a
whole. It is suggested that there is, and that English and German
can serve as a case study for a more general typology of languages
than we now have. This volume will be of interest to a wide range
of linguists, including students of Germanic languages; language
typologists; generative grammarians attempting to 'fix the
parameters' on language variation;' historical linguists; and
applied linguists.
First published in 1988, this book is concerned with the definite
and indefinite articles in English. It provides an integrated
pragmatic-semantic theory of definite and indefinite reference, on
the basis of which, many co-occurance restrictions between articles
and non-modifiers are explained. At the general theoretical level,
this book looks at the role of semantics in the prediction of all
and only the grammatical sentences of a language. A generalisation
is proposed uniting semantic oppositions underlying
ungrammaticality with syntactic oppositions between conditions of
application on transformational generative rules. A procedure is
suggested for distinguishing semantic from syntactic causes of
ungrammaticality. At a more particular level, the book explores the
nature of reference. It examines an important selection of subjects
such as the contrast between definiteness and indefiniteness, the
relationship between definite and demonstrative reference, and the
relationship between pragmatic and logical aspects of determining
meaning.
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