Random variable: Difference between revisions
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In [[probability theory]], a branch of [[mathematics]], a '''random variable''' is, as its name suggests, a variable that can take on random values. More formally, it is not actually a variable , but a function whose argument takes on a particular value according to some probability [[measure]] (a measure that takes on the value 1 over the largest set on which it is defined). | In [[probability theory]], a branch of [[mathematics]], a '''random variable''' is, as its name suggests, a variable that can take on random values. More formally, it is not actually a variable , but a function whose argument takes on a particular value according to some probability [[measure]] (a measure that takes on the value 1 over the largest set on which it is defined). | ||
Revision as of 05:01, 17 October 2007
In probability theory, a branch of mathematics, a random variable is, as its name suggests, a variable that can take on random values. More formally, it is not actually a variable , but a function whose argument takes on a particular value according to some probability measure (a measure that takes on the value 1 over the largest set on which it is defined).
Formal definition
Let be an arbitrary probability space and an arbitrary measurable space. Then a random variable is any measurable function X mapping to .
An easy example
Consider the probability space where is the sigma algebra of Borel subsets of and P is a probability measure on (hence P is measure with ). Then the identity map defined by is trivially a measurable function, hence is a random variable.
References
- P. Billingsley, Probability and Measure (2 ed.), ser. Wiley Series in Probability and Mathematical Statistics, Wiley, 1986.
- D. Williams, Probability with Martingales, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1991.