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<E-Book>
Quantitative Economics with R : A Data Science Approach / by Vikram Dayal

Edition 1st ed. 2020.
Publisher (Singapore : Springer Nature Singapore : Imprint: Springer)
Year 2020
Language English
Size XV, 326 p. 300 illus., 89 illus. in color : online resource
Authors *Dayal, Vikram author
SpringerLink (Online service)
Subjects LCSH:Game theory
LCSH:Econometrics
LCSH:Statistics 
LCSH:Computer simulation
LCSH:Sociology -- Methodology  All Subject Search
FREE:Game Theory
FREE:Quantitative Economics
FREE:Statistics in Business, Management, Economics, Finance, Insurance
FREE:Computer Modelling
FREE:Sociological Methods
Notes Ch 1 Introduction -- Ch 2 R and RStudio -- Ch 3 Getting data into R -- Ch 4 Wrangling and graphing data -- Ch 5 Functions -- Ch 6 Matrices -- Ch 7 Probability and statistical inference -- Ch 8 Causal inference -- Ch 9 Solow model and basic facts of growth -- Ch 10 Causal inference for growth -- Ch 11 Graphing and simulating basic time series -- Ch 12 Simple examples: forecasting and causal inference -- Ch 13 Generalized additive models -- Ch 14 Tree models
This book provides a contemporary treatment of quantitative economics, with a focus on data science. The book introduces the reader to R and RStudio, and uses expert Hadley Wickham’s tidyverse package for different parts of the data analysis workflow. After a gentle introduction to R code, the reader’s R skills are gradually honed, with the help of “your turn” exercises. At the heart of data science is data, and the book equips the reader to import and wrangle data, (including network data). Very early on, the reader will begin using the popular ggplot2 package for visualizing data, even making basic maps. The use of R in understanding functions, simulating difference equations, and carrying out matrix operations is also covered. The book uses Monte Carlo simulation to understand probability and statistical inference, and the bootstrapis introduced. Causal inference isilluminated using simulation, data graphs, and R code for applications with real economic examples, covering experiments, matching, regression discontinuity, difference-in-difference, and instrumental variables. The interplay of growth related data and models is presented, before the book introduces the reader to time series data analysis with graphs, simulation, and examples. Lastly, two computationally intensive methods—generalized additive models and random forests (an important and versatile machine learning method)—are introduced intuitively with applications. The book will be of great interest to economists—students, teachers, and researchers alike—who want to learn R. It will help economics students gain an intuitive appreciation of appliedeconomics and enjoy engaging with the material actively, while also equipping them with key data science skills
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-2035-8
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E-Book オンライン 電子ブック

Springer eBooks 9789811520358
電子リソース
EB00236914

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Material Type E-Book
Classification LCC:QA269-272
DC23:519.3
ID 4000134706
ISBN 9789811520358

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