Name: Matthew Gregory
Type: User
Company: Government Digital Service
Bio: I completed a PhD in Genetic Engineering at the University of Oxford and realised my penchant for Data Science. I transitioned to the public sector with GOV.UK
Twitter: mammykins_
Location: London
Blog: https://about.me/mammykins
Matthew Gregory's Projects
Code for the AI A-Z course by superdatascience.com
A Shiny app for mapping School specific variables by Local Education Authority with Leaflet in R
An app for dota 2 to help calculate current effective hp and the affect of items on ehp
Time series forecasting for common inflators and economic indices using the forecast package in R.
Baccarat simulation
The http://bash.academy website
Practice running R scripts from the command line as part of a pipeline.
A place to practice exploring and analysing UCI machine learning data sets
repo for coursera assignments - Data Science
The Leek group guide to data sharing
Using a 2008 dataset we use linear regression to model diamond price by 9 predictors
Simple container for Python App to practise Docker
A bunch of functions to aid calculations related to the popular computer game Dota 2
R interface to dygraphs
Plotting Assignment 1 for Exploratory Data Analysis
EDA course project 1
An implementation of the Grammar of Graphics in R
How to get the number of injections just right when using piggyBac in insects.
A Streamlit app that uses generative Large Language Models to adjust a user's submitted content in the tone of GOV.UK. A simple proof of concept produced in one evening.
Experimenting with scispacy for named entity recognition in technical text
Explores Keras deep-learning models that can process text
Working my way through Andrej Karpathy's makemore lessons
Maintenance model - combine deterioration model with a decision model for optimal policy
Google Chrome, Firefox, and Thunderbird extension that lets you write email in Markdown and render it before sending.
Neo4j + vis.js = neovis.js. Graph visualizations in the browser with data from Neo4j.
Departmental organograms are a great example of how transparency data can be used to assess Government effectiveness and invites you to help us unlock their potential.