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This textbook provides an accessible overview of statistical
learning methods and techniques, and includes case studies using
the statistical software Stata. After introductory material on
statistical learning concepts and practical aspects, each further
chapter is devoted to a statistical learning algorithm or a group
of related techniques. In particular, the book presents logistic
regression, regularized linear models such as the Lasso, nearest
neighbors, the Naive Bayes classifier, classification trees, random
forests, boosting, support vector machines, feature engineering,
neural networks, and stacking. It also explains how to construct
n-gram variables from text data. Examples, conceptual exercises and
exercises using software are featured throughout, together with
case studies in Stata, mostly from the social sciences; true to the
book’s goal to facilitate the use of modern methods of data
science in the field. Although mainly intended for upper
undergraduate and graduate students in the social sciences, given
its applied nature, the book will equally appeal to readers from
other disciplines, including the health sciences, statistics,
engineering and computer science.
Presents the most comprehensive description to date of the
longest-running mass tort litigation in U.S. history. Asbestos
litigation is the longest-running mass tort litigation in U.S.
history. Through 2002, approximately 730,000 individuals have
brought claims against some 8,400 business entities, and defendants
and insurers have spent a total of USD70 billion on litigation.
Building on previous RAND briefings, the authors report on what
happened to those who have claimed injury from asbestos, what
happened to the defendants in those cases, and how lawyers and
judges have managed the cases.
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