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In Lecture 11, we continued our discussion of Parametric Density Estimation techniques. We discussed the Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE) method and look at a couple of 1-dimension examples for case when feature in dataset follows Gaussian distribution. First, we looked at case where mean parameter was unknown, but variance parameter is known. Then we followed with another example where both mean and variance where unknown. Finally, we looked at the slight "bias" problem when calculating the variance.

Below are the notes from lecture.

Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE)


General Principles: Given vague knowledge about a situation and some training data (i.e. feature vector values for which the class is known) $ x_l, l=1,\ldots,\text{hopefully large number} $

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Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

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