by Andrew Moore (CMU), including tutorials on decision trees, information gain, cross validation, naive bayesian classifiers, hidden markov models, support vector machines, k-means and hierarchical clustering
In my experience, proof readers tend to be rather calm individuals, going about their work in an unruffled, dignified manner. Proof readers are rarely confrontational in temperament, because proofreading by its very nature requires a serene and reflective approach. So, it was rare for me, as an Operations Manager supervising, amongst other people, proof readers, to have to intervene in any kind of serious dispute.
Except when it came to hyphens.
D. Traum, and U. Geneve. In Susann LuperFoy, Anton Nijhholt, and Gert Veldhuijzen van Zanten, editors, Proceedings of Twente Workshop on Language Technology, TWLT-II, page 1--11. (1996)
M. Walker, R. Passonneau, and J. Boland. Proceedings of the 39th Annual Meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics, page 515--522. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2001)