This course provides a general introduction to data science and machine
learning, covering topics such as statistical learning theory,
supervised learning (parametric and non-parametric), as well as
unsupervised methods. In the tutorial, students will implement methods
in Python and apply them to real data.
- Profesor: Christian Frey
- Profesor: Moritz Große Wentrup
- Profesor: Alexander Markham
- Profesor: Moritz Große Wentrup
- Profesor: Alexander Markham
The course content is currently available here.
- Profesor: Francois Bry
- Profesor: Andreas Butz
- Profesor: Yingding Wang
This course is centered around software design and systems development. We explore and apply the concept of object-oriented programming which is (still) the leading programming paradigm for extensive projects. In contrast to other programming paradigms like functional or declarative programming object-oriented programming languages model objects through their attributes and functionalities. This concept has proven convenient when modeling real-world problems.
Theoretic background will
be brought to action in programming exercises and a small programming
project. In the first weeks (duration determined according to progress),
you will learn the core functionalities of object-oriented programming
such classes, inheritance, polymorphy, interfaces and abstract classes.
Subsequently, you will build a basic routing service following weekly
exercises. Given two geo-locations via a web service the routing service
will compute the shortest path and return it to the user where the
result will be displayed.
- Profesor: Max Berrendorf
- Profesor: Yifeng Lu
- Profesor: Sebastian Schmoll
- Profesor: Matthias Schubert
The
course gives an overview on basic concepts of data structures and
general principles of algorithmic design. The general algorithmic
paradigms will be examined based on the classical problems of searching,
sorting and classical graph problems like shortest path or minimal
spanning trees. Finally, the course will give an introduction to the
general methodology of programming.
Find the code of the lessons in the forum.
- Profesor: Felix Borutta
- Profesor: Julian Busch
- Profesor: Matthias Schubert
Statistical core module for Data Science.
- Profesor: Sonja Greven
- Profesor: Christian Heumann
- Profesor: Göran Kauermann
- Profesor: Michael Lebacher
- Profesor: Christoph Striegel
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In recent years, deep learning network has steadily increased in popularity, mainly due to their state-of-the-art performance in image and speech recognition, text mining and related tasks. Deep neural networks attempt to automatically learn multi-level representations and features of data and are able to uncover complex underlying data structures.
The lecture aims at providing a basic theoretical and practical understanding of modern neural network approaches. We will start out by covering the necessary background on traditional artificial neural networks, backpropagation, online learning, and regularization. Then we will cover special methods used in deep learning, like drop-out and rectified linear units. We will also talk about further advanced topics like convolutional layers, recurrent neural networks, and auto-encoders.
We will also talk about practical application and open-source deep learning libraries.
Requirements:
English
Statistics Master (any) or Data Science Master
Some background in modeling, e.g., lecture on GLMs, preferably a lecture on machine learning / predictive modeling
Some background in optimization, e.g., Computational Methods I in the statistics master
Practical programming knowledge in R or Python
- Profesor: Niklas Klein
- Profesor: Janek Thomas
We will introduce the basic concepts of multivariate statistical methods for data scientists. This includes [[subject to change]]:
- Random vectors, multivariate distributions, and their inference
- Visualization of multivariate data
- Principal Components Analysis (PCA)
- Multidimensional Scaling
- Factor analysis
- Cluster analysis
- Repeated measures data
Lecturers:
- Prof. Bernd Bischl (bernd.bischl@stat.uni-muenchen.de)
- Janek Thomas (janek.thomas@stat.uni-muenchen.de)
Login: MVS1718
Time:
- Profesor: Bernd Bischl
- Profesor: Xudong Sun
- Profesor: Janek Thomas