There are several strong reasons to choose ExcelR for your Data Science course in Nagpur. First off, have the advantage of knowledgeable guidance while you pick the brains of business titans. Our curriculum is carefully planned to cover everything from basic to advanced subjects, guaranteeing a thorough education. Take part in practical projects that allow you to easily apply your theoretical knowledge to actual situations. ExcelR gives you the ability to become proficient with state-of-the-art tools like R, Python, and more, so you can stay ahead of the competition. Get individualized career advice designed to help you succeed in the employment market. Additionally, have access to special networking opportunities to make connections with experts and individuals in the field. Our data-driven methodology makes sure you gain actionable insights that have a genuine influence. Join ExcelR on a transformative learning experience where our goal is to help you succeed in the fast-paced area of data science.
Data Science is part of the emerging technologies that are sought after by every industry, irrespective of its size and operations. Learn Data Science to analyse the data and create machine learning models for decision making. We at CEDLEARN believe in the project-based Hybrid Learning approach to convert knowledge into skills.
Nature 26 Oct 2021--Catalogue of billions of phrases from 107 million papers could ease computerized searching of the literature. Catalogue of billions of phrases from 107 million papers could ease computerized searching of the literature.
In a project that could unlock the world’s research papers for easier computerized analysis, an American technologist [Carl Malamud]has released online a gigantic index of the words and short phrases contained in more than 100 million journal articles — including many paywalled papers.
The catalogue, which was released on 7 October and is free to use, holds tables of more than 355 billion words and sentence fragments listed next to the articles in which they appear. It is an effort to help scientists use software to glean insights from published work even if they have no legal access to the underlying papers, says its creator, Carl Malamud. He released the files under the auspices of Public Resource, a non-profit corporation in Sebastopol, California that he founded.
Malamud says that because his index doesn’t contain the full text of articles, but only sentence snippets up to five words long, releasing it does not breach publishers' copyright restrictions on the re-use of paywalled articles. However, one legal expert says that publishers might question the legality of how Malamud created the index in the first place.
Nature, July 2019. -- A giant data store quietly being built in India could free vast swathes of science for computer analysis — but is it legal? A giant data store quietly being built in India could free vast swathes of science for computer analysis —but is it legal?
Over the past year, Malamud has — without asking publishers — teamed up with Indian researchers to build a gigantic store of text and images extracted from 73 million journal articles dating from 1847 up to the present day. The cache, which is still being created, will be kept on a 576-terabyte storage facility at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in New Delhi. “This is not every journal article ever written, but it’s a lot,” Malamud says. It’s comparable to the size of the core collection in the Web of Science database, for instance. Malamud and his JNU collaborator, bioinformatician Andrew Lynn, call their facility the JNU data depot.