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Spline-uri de regresie și de netezire×Model aditiv generalizat (GAM)×Regresie Locală LOESS / LOWESS×
DomeniuÎnvățare automatăÎnvățare automatăÎnvățare automată
FamilieMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Anul apariției199619861979
Autorul originalSpline regression literature; P-splines by Eilers & MarxTrevor Hastie & Robert TibshiraniWilliam S. Cleveland
TipPiecewise-polynomial nonparametric regressionSemi-parametric additive regression modelLocal nonparametric regression smoother
Sursa seminalăEilers, P. H. C., & Marx, B. D. (1996). Flexible smoothing with B-splines and penalties. Statistical Science, 11(2), 89–121. DOI ↗Hastie, T., & Tibshirani, R. (1986). Generalized additive models. Statistical Science, 1(3), 297–310. DOI ↗Cleveland, W. S. (1979). Robust locally weighted regression and smoothing scatterplots. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 74(368), 829–836. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativesplines, cubic splines, natural splines, smoothing splinesGAM, additive model, spline-based additive regression, Genelleştirilmiş toplamsal modelLOWESS, local regression, locally weighted scatterplot smoothing, yerel regresyon
Înrudite443
RezumatRegression splines model a nonlinear relationship by fitting piecewise polynomials that join smoothly at a set of points called knots. Cubic and natural splines are the most common, and smoothing splines add a roughness penalty that automatically balances fit against smoothness. Splines are the standard flexible building block for univariate nonlinear regression and the basis of generalized additive models.A generalized additive model, introduced by Trevor Hastie and Robert Tibshirani in 1986, extends the generalized linear model by replacing each linear term with a smooth, data-driven function of the predictor. This lets the model capture nonlinear relationships while preserving the additive, term-by-term interpretability of regression: each predictor contributes its own estimated curve, and the curves simply add up (on a link scale) to predict the response.LOESS (locally estimated scatterplot smoothing), introduced by William Cleveland in 1979 and extended with Susan Devlin in 1988, fits a smooth curve through data by performing a separate weighted polynomial regression in the neighbourhood of each point. Nearby observations count more than distant ones, so the method follows local structure without assuming any global functional form, making it a popular exploratory smoother for scatterplots.
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ScholarGateCompară metode: Regression Splines · Generalized Additive Model · LOESS. Preluat la 2026-06-19 de pe https://scholargate.app/ro/compare