Department of Pure Mathematics & Mathematical Statistics Pages 5 – 42 Department of Applied Mathematics & Theoretical Physics Pages 43 – 79
- Paul Delhanty
Locking And Unlinking Fields You can achieve this by locking the field. To do so, select the field and press Ctrl-F11. From then on, the field will retain its value, even after you update it. To unlock the field, select it and press Ctrl-Shift-F11. Similarly, it is possible to unlink a field. In this case, the field ispermanently removed and replaced by its current value, which fromthen onwill be treated as normal text. To do this, first make sure that the field is up to date, then select it and press Ctrl-Shift-F9. This is a one-way action - there is no way to convert the text back to a field later.
- Paul Delhanty
@Manual{, title = {R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing}, author = {{R Development Core Team}}, organization = {R Foundation for Statistical Computing}, address = {Vienna, Austria}, year = 2009, note = {{ISBN} 3-900051-07-0}, url = {http://www.R-project.org} }
- Paul Delhanty
Professor of Information Engineering Department of Engineering University of Cambridge Cambs Associate Research Professor Machine Learning Department Carnegie Mellon University CMU SCS logo Adjunct Faculty Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit University College London
- Paul Delhanty
Olivier Bousquet1, Stephane Boucheron2, and Gabor Lugosi3 1 Max-Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics Spemannstr. 38, D-72076 Tubingen, Germany olivier.bousquet@m4x.org WWW home page: http://www.kyb.mpg.de/~bousqu... 2 Universite de Paris-Sud, Laboratoire d'Informatique B^atiment 490, F-91405 Orsay Cedex, France stephane.boucheron@lri.fr WWW home page: http://www.lri.fr/~bouchero 3 Department of Economics, Pompeu Fabra University Ramon Trias Fargas 25-27, 08005 Barcelona, Spain lugosi@upf.es WWW home page: http://www.econ.upf.es/~lugosi Abstract. The goal of statistical learning theory is to study, in a statistical framework, the properties of learning algorithms. In particular, most results take the form of so-called error bounds. This tutorial introduces the techniques that are used to obtain such results.
- Paul Delhanty