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  2. scikit-learn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scikit-learn

    scikit-learn (formerly scikits.learn and also known as sklearn) is a free and open-source machine learning library for the Python programming language. [3] It features various classification, regression and clustering algorithms including support-vector machines, random forests, gradient boosting, k-means and DBSCAN, and is designed to interoperate with the Python numerical and scientific ...

  3. List of datasets for machine-learning research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_datasets_for...

    Website with academic papers about security topics. This data is not pre-processed Papers per category, papers archive by date. [379] Trendmicro Website with research, news, and perspectives bout security topics. This data is not pre-processed Reviewed list of Trendmicro research, news, and perspectives. [380] The Hacker News

  4. Keras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keras

    Keras allows users to produce deep models on smartphones (iOS and Android), on the web, or on the Java Virtual Machine. [8] It also allows use of distributed training of deep-learning models on clusters of graphics processing units (GPU) and tensor processing units (TPU) .

  5. Word2vec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word2vec

    Word2vec was created, patented, [7] and published in 2013 by a team of researchers led by Mikolov at Google over two papers. [1] [2] The original paper was rejected by reviewers for ICLR conference 2013. It also took months for the code to be approved for open-sourcing. [8] Other researchers helped analyse and explain the algorithm. [4]

  6. Least-angle regression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Least-angle_regression

    Standardized coefficients shown as a function of proportion of shrinkage. In statistics, least-angle regression (LARS) is an algorithm for fitting linear regression models to high-dimensional data, developed by Bradley Efron, Trevor Hastie, Iain Johnstone and Robert Tibshirani.

  7. OPTICS algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPTICS_algorithm

    The R package "dbscan" includes a C++ implementation of OPTICS (with both traditional dbscan-like and ξ cluster extraction) using a k-d tree for index acceleration for Euclidean distance only. Python implementations of OPTICS are available in the PyClustering library and in scikit-learn. HDBSCAN* is available in the hdbscan library.

  8. Perceptron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptron

    In machine learning, the perceptron (or McCulloch–Pitts neuron) is an algorithm for supervised learning of binary classifiers.A binary classifier is a function which can decide whether or not an input, represented by a vector of numbers, belongs to some specific class. [1]

  9. Random sample consensus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_sample_consensus

    A simple example is fitting a line in two dimensions to a set of observations. Assuming that this set contains both inliers, i.e., points which approximately can be fitted to a line, and outliers, points which cannot be fitted to this line, a simple least squares method for line fitting will generally produce a line with a bad fit to the data including inliers and outliers.