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Bayesian Computation with R (Use R)

Bayesian Computation with R (Use R)Author: Jim Albert
Publisher: Springer

List Price: $59.95
Buy New: $44.62
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New (24) Used (8) from $44.62

Seller: oddesseyy
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 61905

Media: Paperback
Edition: 2nd ed.
Pages: 300
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.7

ISBN: 0387922970
Dewey Decimal Number: 519
EAN: 9780387922973
ASIN: 0387922970

Publication Date: May 15, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Bayesian Computation with R (Use R)
  • Kindle Edition - Bayesian Computation with R

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Product Description

There has been a dramatic growth in the development and application of Bayesian inferential methods. Some of this growth is due to the availability of powerful simulation-based algorithms to summarize posterior distributions. There has been also a growing interest in the use of the system R for statistical analyses. R's open source nature, free availability, and large number of contributor packages have made R the software of choice for many statisticians in education and industry.

Bayesian Computation with R introduces Bayesian modeling by the use of computation using the R language. The early chapters present the basic tenets of Bayesian thinking by use of familiar one and two-parameter inferential problems. Bayesian computational methods such as Laplace's method, rejection sampling, and the SIR algorithm are illustrated in the context of a random effects model. The construction and implementation of Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods is introduced. These simulation-based algorithms are implemented for a variety of Bayesian applications such as normal and binary response regression, hierarchical modeling, order-restricted inference, and robust modeling. Algorithms written in R are used to develop Bayesian tests and assess Bayesian models by use of the posterior predictive distribution. The use of R to interface with WinBUGS, a popular MCMC computing language, is described with several illustrative examples.

This book is a suitable companion book for an introductory course on Bayesian methods and is valuable to the statistical practitioner who wishes to learn more about the R language and Bayesian methodology. The LearnBayes package, written by the author and available from the CRAN website, contains all of the R functions described in the book.

The second edition contains several new topics such as the use of mixtures of conjugate priors and the use of Zellner’s g priors to choose between models in linear regression. There are more illustrations of the construction of informative prior distributions, such as the use of conditional means priors and multivariate normal priors in binary regressions. The new edition contains changes in the R code illustrations according to the latest edition of the LearnBayes package.




Customer Reviews:
3 out of 5 stars good if you don't need too much detail   December 5, 2008
Cory Merow
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

if you're a novice or non R user, this will be a helpful introduction. the focus is on developing multipurpose code for simple models. its not great for picking up in the middle, you really need to go through chapter by chapter as the functions he writes build on one another. also, he has a modified LearnBayes package in R that changes a few of the functions in the text, so occasionally you have to tinker with them to get them to work (although its not difficult). this is good for a very first bayesian/R learner as the R code is not demanding, but it lacks the detail for the more complex models where bayesian methods pay off.


5 out of 5 stars Excellent book for self-starters   September 19, 2008
Statistixian (USA)
9 out of 10 found this review helpful

This is a great book that introduces practical Bayesian computing for scientists and quantitatively oriented people. Good sections on MCMC and other aspects without getting too mathematical (as opposed to being statistical - Does not mean that you won't find any symbols). Having said that, please be at the level of Casella/Berger on the (frequentist) mathematical statistics level and one of the following books should serve as a good companion for Bayes theory - Peter Lee (2004 - Great introduction), GCSR (Gelman et. al.) or Carlin and Louis. If you want to learn further details of the computational algorithms, MCSM by Casella and Robert is an excellent reference.

The book starts out by introducing us to R and then the Bayesian way of thinking and analyzing data. Up until chapter 5, we learn how to summarize posteriors when functional forms exist and how the various author-created functions serve the purpose. (The author's LearnBayes package contains many excellent functions that can be used in a wide variety of situations). Chapters 6, 10 and 11 form the core of how you perform MCMC and the various algorithms behind it. BRugs is introduced as well. I would also recommend the author's website and his excellent blog for learning 'Bayes'. http://bayes.bgsu.edu/bcwr/

Good resource if you are motivated enough, but you definitely need a companion book on Bayesian Statistics if you are not already well-versed in the theoretical aspects of these techniques. Great book for the Bayes-curious statistico... Of course, if you are reading this review you don't have to be told how great R is. Price has dropped 20% since it first came on the market. I'd say, a steal at 40 bucks.




2 out of 5 stars Another R Book: 3-stars given...not 2   August 16, 2008
William H. Atkinson
38 out of 38 found this review helpful

The good: The first three chapters gives the reader a nice introduction to using R for Bayesian statistics and some well worked out examples: a necessity when dealing with a program that one is unfamiliar with. The text does a decent job of complementing the material found in another text on basic Bayesian methodology such as Gelman et al. (2004) or Carlin and Lewis (2008). Furthermore, Jim Albert is a great writer and presents the material well.

The Facts: Towards the latter half of the text the author begins to use a program from the 'Learn Bayes' package entitled "Laplace". It is of my belief that this black box could be elaborated on some. I had some trouble getting many of the examples from the text as well as exercises from the sections to run simply because of this black box. None of nine graduate students working together and independently were able to get this function to perform its duties on a regular basis. However, the examples and problems were instructive.

The Opinion: I was not a fan of the functions from the Learn Bayes package and did not feel as though the reader gained an adequate background on how to program R to perform Bayesian methods on his/her own. The book, I believe, relied to much (in the latter half of the text) on the functions of the Learn Bayes package.

Overall the text is great resource to complement another text. The only real `issue' I had with this text was not the text itself but rather the "Learn Bayes" package. If you are looking for a resource for R this might not be the right book. As a quick and dirty introduction to Bayesian methods using R (as the title suggests) this isn't a BAD text.



5 out of 5 stars Fantastic Resource   July 1, 2008
Charles Saunders (Tallahassee, FL United States)
5 out of 11 found this review helpful

Great book. If you work through the examples, this book will move you to very near the top of the R learning curve and, more importantly, race you to the peak of the Bayesian curve.


5 out of 5 stars more practicality added to Bayesian inference   August 14, 2007
Michael R. Chernick (Holland PA)
97 out of 110 found this review helpful

Jim Albert is a great teacher and an excellent writer. The R language is becoming one of the most used languages by statistical researchers. This is because it has many similarities to S and can be used freely, Jim makes R easy to learn for statisticians in this book. One of the big breakthroughs in Bayesian statistics over the past 2 decades was the implementation of complicated priors and hierarchical models through the Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithms. The leaders is this filed created free software called BUGS (for Bayesian Analysis Using Gibbs Sampling). Gibbs sampling is one of the most commonly used MCMC algorithms. Statisticians using this software have been able to provide more satisfactory solutions to many basic and complex problems using these tools. After Windows became the dominant operating system on personal computers WINBUGS was born. This is a version of BUGS that uses Windows as the operating system and takes advantage of Windows many nice features. Now for the first time to my knowledge Jim Albert show the reader how to incorporate the BUGS technology in the framework of R programming. This can only add to the practical use of Bayesian methods among statisticians for research that advances both the theory and applications. In the late 1990s I was working in the medical device industry where a number of clinical trials were being analyzed using the MCMC methods. Jim deserves a great deal of credit for moving Bayesian statistics into the framework of R!




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