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Learning Bayesian Models with R

You're reading from   Learning Bayesian Models with R Become an expert in Bayesian Machine Learning methods using R and apply them to solve real-world big data problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783987603
Length 168 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Hari Manassery Koduvely Hari Manassery Koduvely
Author Profile Icon Hari Manassery Koduvely
Hari Manassery Koduvely
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing the Probability Theory FREE CHAPTER 2. The R Environment 3. Introducing Bayesian Inference 4. Machine Learning Using Bayesian Inference 5. Bayesian Regression Models 6. Bayesian Classification Models 7. Bayesian Models for Unsupervised Learning 8. Bayesian Neural Networks 9. Bayesian Modeling at Big Data Scale Index

The Naïve Bayes classifier


The name Naïve Bayes comes from the basic assumption in the model that the probability of a particular feature is independent of any other feature given the class label . This implies the following:

Using this assumption and the Bayes rule, one can show that the probability of class , given features , is given by:

Here, is the normalization term obtained by summing the numerator on all the values of k. It is also called Bayesian evidence or partition function Z. The classifier selects a class label as the target class that maximizes the posterior class probability :

The Naïve Bayes classifier is a baseline classifier for document classification. One reason for this is that the underlying assumption that each feature (words or m-grams) is independent of others, given the class label typically holds good for text. Another reason is that the Naïve Bayes classifier scales well when there is a large number of documents.

There are two implementations of Naïve Bayes. In...

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