VOL 51 .... No. 6

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1971

Never To See Any Other Way

February 8th, 2010 Kevin No comments

nevertosee

I haven’t done any painting in a while, and frankly, I missed it a little.  So a couple weeks ago, when I visited NYC with Natalie, I saw a painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that I just fell in love with. Read more…

Categories: Potpourri Tags: , ,

Macro-Like Facebook GreaseMonkey Script

February 7th, 2010 Kevin No comments

mattdamon

Are you tired of micro-managing your likes?  We all know that a well-placed like on Facebook can be hilarious. But clicking like over and over is so difficult! Now you can just like everything with one easy click… Read more…

Categories: Internet Tags: , ,

Perturbation Model of Price Movement

February 4th, 2010 Kevin 1 comment

shwayze

I was sitting in my networks class today, thinking of how it would be possible to implement an algorithm for taking into consideration the similarity of documents for teasing apart temporal interference, when I started coming to a more coherent model of what I’ve been trying to do in general.  This article will set up some early ideas for a model of what’s going on, what we’re attempting to accomplish, and possible general procedures for doing so.  It also sets up some terminology. Read more…

Two Approaches to News Rating

February 3rd, 2010 Kevin No comments

flan

Last time, I generated a few data sets for testing different methods of rating the training news articles.  This time, I actually implemented two of them, the naive approach I had used before, and the new-and-improved version taking into account temporal interference. Read more…

Test Data Sets

February 2nd, 2010 Kevin No comments

test-data

From my last post, I introduced the idea of creating test data sets for the purpose of finding an algorithm to tease apart the influence of individual news articles.  I have done just that and am posting the data sets for further analysis. Read more…

Temporal Interference

February 1st, 2010 Kevin No comments

coyabaanniversary400

This article is the second of the Automated News Analysis series, regarding a particular problem I overlooked during my first try at news analysis.  The subject of this article is taking a dataset of news and price history, and attempting to assign sentiment to the news articles for which we know the price development.  The problem that we will explore in particular, is removing influences from other news articles near our target article in time. Read more…

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