I have several questions.

Is it possible to "give a detailed overview of statistical
models for regression and classification" in two-day course?

What do you mean by "Modern Regression and Classification"?
May be it's better to call this "Some Methods in Regression
and Classification (in which we feel ourselves experts)"?

And the last, isn't this message similar to spam?

    -----------------------------
    Alexander Tsyplakov
    Novosibirsk State University
    http://www.nsu.ru/ef/tsy/
    8+383-2+39-71-69

Rob Tibshirani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
8np97h$su8$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8np97h$su8$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>
>
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
++
>         +++
+++
>         +++        MODERN REGRESSION AND CLASSIFICATION:
+++
>         +++
+++
>         +++      Widely applicable statistical methods
+++
>         +++            for modeling and prediction
+++
>         +++
+++
>         +++  UPDATED: covering state-of-the-art
developments in    +++
>         +++   boosting methods and support vector
machines!        +++
>         +++
+++
>         +++          Palo Alto, CA          November
13-14, 2000   +++
>         +++
+++
>         +++            Trevor Hastie,
+++
>         +++            Rob Tibshirani, Stanford University
+++
>         +++
+++
>
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
++
>
> This two-day course will give a detailed overview of
statistical
> models for regression and classification. Known as
machine-learning in
> computer science and artificial intelligence, and pattern
recognition
> in engineering, this is a hot field with powerful
applications in
> finance, science and industry.
>






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