Data science basics
Data science basics
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with information science or computer science.
Data science also integrates domain knowledge from the underlying application
domain (e.g., natural sciences, information technology, and medicine). [3] Data
science is multifaceted and can be described as a science, a research paradigm, a
research method, a discipline, a workflow, and a profession. [4]
Data science is "a concept to unify statistics, data analysis, informatics, and their
related methods" to "understand and analyze actual phenomena" with data.[5] It uses
techniques and theories drawn from many fields within the context of mathematics,
statistics, computer science, information science, and domain
knowledge.[6] However, data science is different from computer science and
information science. Turing Award winner Jim Gray imagined data science as a
"fourth paradigm" of science (empirical, theoretical, computational, and now data-
driven) and asserted that "everything about science is changing because of the
impact of information technology" and the data deluge.[7][8]
Foundations
[edit]
Data science is an interdisciplinary field[10] focused on extracting knowledge from
typically large data sets and applying the knowledge from that data to solve
problems in other application domains. The field encompasses preparing data for
analysis, formulating data science problems, analyzing data, and summarizing these
findings. As such, it incorporates skills from computer science, mathematics, data
visualization, graphic design, communication, and business.[11]
Vasant Dhar writes that statistics emphasizes quantitative data and description. In
contrast, data science deals with quantitative and qualitative data (e.g., from images,
text, sensors, transactions, customer information, etc.) and emphasizes prediction
and action.[12] Andrew Gelman of Columbia University has described statistics as a
non-essential part of data science.[13] Stanford professor David Donoho writes that
data science is not distinguished from statistics by the size of datasets or use of
computing and that many graduate programs misleadingly advertise their analytics
and statistics training as the essence of a data-science program. He describes data
science as an applied field growing out of traditional statistics. [14]
Etymology
[edit]
Early usage
[edit]
In 1962, John Tukey described a field he called "data analysis", which resembles
modern data science.[14] In 1985, in a lecture given to the Chinese Academy of
Sciences in Beijing, C. F. Jeff Wu used the term "data science" for the first time as
an alternative name for statistics.[15] Later, attendees at a 1992 statistics symposium
at the University of Montpellier II acknowledged the emergence of a new discipline
focused on data of various origins and forms, combining established concepts and
principles of statistics and data analysis with computing. [16][17]
The term "data science" has been traced back to 1974, when Peter Naur proposed it
as an alternative name to computer science.[6] In 1996, the International Federation
of Classification Societies became the first conference to specifically feature data
science as a topic.[6] However, the definition was still in flux. After the 1985 lecture at
the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, in 1997 C. F. Jeff Wu again suggested
that statistics should be renamed data science. He reasoned that a new name would
help statistics shed inaccurate stereotypes, such as being synonymous with
accounting or limited to describing data. [18] In 1998, Hayashi Chikio argued for data
science as a new, interdisciplinary concept, with three aspects: data design,
collection, and analysis.[17]
Modern usage
[edit]
In 2012, technologists Thomas H. Davenport and DJ Patil declared "Data Scientist:
The Sexiest Job of the 21st Century",[19] a catchphrase that was picked up even by
major-city newspapers like the New York Times[20] and the Boston Globe.[21] A decade
later, they reaffirmed it, stating that "the job is more in demand than ever with
employers".[22]
The professional title of "data scientist" has been attributed to DJ Patil and Jeff
Hammerbacher in 2008.[25] Though it was used by the National Science Board in their
2005 report "Long-Lived Digital Data Collections: Enabling Research and Education
in the 21st Century", it referred broadly to any key role in managing a digital data
collection.[26]
Data science involves working with larger datasets that often require advanced
computational and statistical methods to analyze. Data scientists often work
with unstructured data such as text or images and use machine learning algorithms
to build predictive models. Data science often uses statistical analysis, data
preprocessing, and supervised learning.[28][29]
Some distributed computing frameworks are designed to handle big data workloads.
These frameworks can enable data scientists to process and analyze large datasets
in parallel, which can reduce processing times. [32]
Machine learning models can amplify existing biases present in training data, leading
to discriminatory or unfair outcomes.[35][36]
See also
[edit]