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Data Mining in Finance: Advances in Relational and Hybrid Methods (Kluwer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science)

Data Mining in Finance: Advances in Relational and Hybrid Methods (Kluwer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science)

List Price: $173.00
Your Price: $173.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It is a very informative book
Review: It is a very informative book with all major data mining methods and their comparisons compressed into 300 pages. Therefore, a significant part of the book is not leisurely reading. This is typical for the books from Kluwer Academic Publishers. One has to be ready to spend enough time to go through algorithms' details, pseudo code and comparisons of algorithms to get a serious benefit for the design of one's own model.
For instance, understanding the power of first-order if -then rules over the decision trees gained from the book can significantly change and improve design.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: What a disappointment
Review: This book is badly written. It contains many useless comparisons
between different methods without telling you how to achieve the
best result. You still on your own.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent book in terms outlined by its authors
Review: This is one of the most informative books I've found on the subject of mathematical modeling of financial time series. The book is largely a review of the 'state of the art' and frequently expects the reader to be familiar with or willing to 'find and read' relevant articles, but we can all do that, can't we?

The book sequentially studies
1. Standard ARIMA (autoregressive models) which are closest to familiar linear regression techniques.
2. Neural nets and Bayesian trees (as a category called 'relational data mining' by the authors)
3. Fuzzy logic approaches (described as 'membership functions'. Membership functions are defined in terms of linguistic practice, whatever that is.).

In this way, the authors develop a seemingly comprehensive outline of the field, describing fields of study in terms of increasing abstraction. Of the three, I found the fuzzy logic discussion the most interesting.

I have to express some reservations regarding the perspective taken by the authors. Their view is that of the Newtonian physicist observing the interactions of bodies entirely independent of the viewer. At no point do the authors examine the implication of 'self participation' in the marketplace. For example, what happens to probability distribution 'X' when a trading entity uses the probability distribution 'X' to take a significant position in a security? If this seems interesting, you might try looking at "Theory of Financial Risks: From Statistical Physics to Risk Management", by Bouchaud or "An Introduction to Econophysics: Correlations and Complexity in Finance" by Mantegna and Stanley.


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