STATISTICAL LEARNING AND DATA MINING III 
State-of-the-Art Statistical Methods for
Data Analysis:
Ten Hot Ideas for Learning from Data

A short course given by
Trevor Hastie and
Robert Tibshirani
both of Stanford University
This two-day course gives a detailed overview of statistical models
for data mining, inference and prediction. With the rapid
developments in internet technology, genomics, financial risk
modeling, and other high-tech industries, we rely increasingly more on
data analysis and statistical models to exploit the vast amounts of
data at our fingertips.
In this course we emphasize some of the most useful tools for tackling modern-day
data analysis problems.
Our top-ten list of topics are:
- Regression and Logistic Regression (two golden oldies),
-
Lasso and Related Methods,
-
Support Vector and Kernel Methodology,
-
Principal Components (SVD) and Variations: sparse SVD, supervised PCA,
Multidimensional Scaling and Isomap, Nonnegative Matrix Factorization, and Local Linear Embedding, -
Boosting, Random Forests and Ensemble Methods,
-
Rule based methods (PRIM),
-
Graphical Models,
-
Cross-Validation,
-
Bootstrap,
-
Feature Selection, False Discovery Rates and Permutation Tests.
This course is the fourth in a series, and follows our popular past
offerings:
Modern Regression and Classification (1996-2000)
Statistical Learning and Data Mining (2001-2005)
Statistical Learning and Data Mining II (2005-2008)
Our earlier courses are not a prerequisite for this new course. Although there is some overlap with past courses, our new course contains many topics not covered by us before.
Software for these techniques will be illustrated, and a copy of the
text "Elements of Statistical Learning: data mining, inference and
prediction (2nd Edition)" and a comprehensive set
of class notes will be provided.
The instructors
Professor Trevor Hastie of the Statistics and Biostatistics
Departments at Stanford University was formerly a member of the
Statistics and Data Analysis Research group, AT&T Bell
Laboratories. He co-authored with Tibshirani the monograph
Generalized Additive Models (1990) published by Chapman and
Hall, and has many research articles in the area of nonparametric
regression and classification. He also co-edited the Wadsworth book
Statistical Models in S (1991) with John Chambers. His
Ph.D. thesis Principal Curves introduced one of the first
nonlinear versions of principal components analysis. During his ten
years at Bell Laboratories he gained valuable experience with
classification and regression problems in industry and
manufacturing.
Professor Robert Tibshirani of the Biostatistics and Statistics departments at Stanford University is a recipient of the COPSS award - an award given jointly by all the leading statistical societies to the most outstanding statistician under the age of 40. He also has many research articles on nonparametric regression and classification. With Bradley Efron he co-authored the best-selling text An Introduction to the Bootstrap in 1993, and has been an active researcher on bootstrap technology over the years. His 1984 Ph.D thesis spawned the currently lively research area known as Local Likelihood. He has more than twenty years experience in consulting on biostatistical problems.
This course is based on The Elements of Statistical Learning. This is the 2nd edition (2009) of the best-selling Springer book published in 2001 by Hastie, Tibshirani and Friedman
Professors
Hastie and Tibshirani published "The Elements of Statistical learning:
Data mining, inference and prediction", with Jerome Friedman
(springer, 2001). This book has received a terrific reception,
with over 30,000 copies sold. The second edition of this book will
appear in February 2009, and has been augmented and brought up to
date. Both presenters are actively involved in research in
regression, classification and clustering, and are well-known not
only in the statistics community but in the machine-learning,
neural network and bioinformatics fields as well. In the past 10
years they have become leaders in the statistical analysis of DNA
microarrays, working with leading-edge biologists such as Patrick
Brown of Stanford University, and David Botstein of
Princeton. They have given many short courses together over the
past 12 years, to academic, government and industrial
audiences. They are both actively involved with consulting in data
analysis and modeling, for the Stanford medical community as well
as local biotech and web-related industries. They have a
reputation for being good instructors who interact well with the
needs of the audience.
So far "Statistical Learning and Data Mining III" took place at:
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 16-17, 2009.
- Donau University, Krems, Austria, September 25-26, 2009.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 18-19, 2010.
- Georgetown University Conference Center, October 11-12, 2010.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 14-15, 2011.
- Georgetown University Conference Center, October 18-19, 2011.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 15-16, 2012.
- Executive Conference Center, New York September 18-19, 2012.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 14-15, 2013.
- Georgetown University Conference Center, October 17-18, 2013.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 20-21, 2014.
- Harvard Conference Center, Boston, Mass, Oct 27-28, 2014.
The "Statistical Learning and Data Mining II" course took place at:
- Harvard Conference Center, Boston, Mass, Oct 31-Nov 1, 2005.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, April 3-4, 2006.
- Doubletree Hotel, Philadelphia, October 12-13, 2006.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 8-9, 2007.
- Georgetown University conference center, October 18-19, 2007.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, California, March 7-8, 2008.
- Harvard Conference Center, Boston, Mass, Oct 6-7, 2008.
The second course "Statistical Learning and Data Mining" by Hastie and Tibshirani
took place at
- University Hotel@MIT, Cambridge, September 6-7, 2001
- Sheraton Hotel, Palo Alto, February 28-March 1, 2002
- Georgetown University conference center, September 19-20, 2002.
- Sheraton Hotel, Palo Alto, February 27-28, 2003.
- University Hotel@MIT, Cambridge, September 15-16, 2003
- Sheraton Hotel, Palo Alto, February 25-26, 2004.
- Georgetown University conference center, September 20-21, 2004.
- Sheraton Hotel, Palo Alto, February 24-25, 2005.
These courses were filled to capacity, and were enthusiastically received
by attendees from biotech, financial and other industrial areas.
Their first course - "Modern Regression and Classification" - took place at:
- Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, March 1996
- Stanford Park Hotel, Menlo Park, California, April 1996
- Beckman Instruments, Los Angeles CA, June 1996
- Stanford Park Hotel, Menlo Park, California, June 1996 (overflow from April course)
- Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, September 1996
- Hyatt Regency Hotel, Boston, December 1996
- Hilton Hawaiian Village, Waikiki, February 1997
- Financial Marriott, New York, June 1997
- ETH Zentrum, Zurich, September 1997
- St Bride Institute, London, September 1997
- Georgetown Conference Center, Washington DCApril 1998
- Leiden University, the Netherlands, October 1998.
- Chicago Radisson Hotel, November 1998
- Stanford Park Hotel, March 1-2 1999
- Stanford Park Hotel, March 29-30 1999 (overflow from previous
course)
- Financial Marriott, New York, June 1999.
- Technical University, Munich, September 1999.
- NSA, Maryland, November 1999.
- Mission Valley Marriott, San Diego, January 2000.
- Grand Hyatt Washington, DC June 2000.
- Sheraton Palo Alto, November 2000.
Some quotes from past attendees:
- "... the best presentation by professional statisticians I have ever had the pleasure of attending. "
- "Superior to most courses in all aspects"
- "I really liked how you emphasized concepts rather than
mathematical expressions"
- "Topics were extremely well linked" ... " Very effective use of humor"
- "Your 2-day course has saved me months of research"
- "... Hastie and Tibshirani are excellent teachers..." - see the review by Steve Miller who attended the Boston 08 course
- Steve Miller also attended the Boston 2011 SLDMIII course - see his latest review
COURSE DETAILS:
- March 19-20, 2015 Sheraton Hotel, Palo Alto,
California.
Sheraton Palo Alto
625 El Camino Real
Palo Alto, CA 94301
1-800-874-3516
SCHEDULE: Days 1 and 2
- 8:00am-9:00am: Check-in and coffee/tea + pastries.
- 9:00am-10:20am: Technical Sessions Begin
- 10:20am-10:35am: Coffee break.
- 10:35am-noon:
Technical Session
- Noon-1:30pm: Lunch
- 1:30pm-2:30pm: Technical Session
- 2:30pm-2:40pm: Break
- 2:40pm-3:45pm:
Technical Session
- 3:45pm-5pm: Technical session + discussion.
PRICE: $1450 per attendee. Full time student price: $1100.
Discounts for groups of 4 or more - 4th and additional attendees receive a $300 discount off the $1450 price, and pay $1150 each.
Attendance is limited to
the first 75 applicants, so sign up soon! These courses fill up
quickly.
REGISTRATION FORM for Palo Alto course
Hotels in vicinity of Stanford University
Read here for more details on
who should
attend, and our
policy
not to sell our course notes.
SLDM Courses Homepage
http://hastie.su.domains/mrc.html