Random variable/Related Articles

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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Random variable.
See also changes related to Random variable, or pages that link to Random variable or to this page or whose text contains "Random variable".

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  • Almost sure convergence [r]: The probability that the given sequence of random variables converges is 1. [e]
  • Applied statistics [r]: the practice of collecting and interpreting numerical observations for the purpose of generating information. [e]
  • Characteristic function [r]: A function on a set which takes the value 1 on a given subset and 0 on its complement. [e]
  • Conditioning (probability) [r]: Conditional probabilities, conditional expectations and conditional distributions are treated on three levels. [e]
  • Confidence interval [r]: the range of a random variable, such as the mean of a sample, that — with a specified probability — contains the true value for the population. [e]
  • Errors and residuals in statistics [r]: Comparison of two related notions of mathematical statistics. [e]
  • Factor analysis [r]: Statistical technique used to explain variability among observed random variables in terms of fewer unobserved random variables called factors. [e]
  • Measurable function [r]: Function on a measurable space to a measurable space such that the inverse image of a measurable set is a measurable set. [e]
  • Measurable space [r]: Set together with a sigma-algebra of subsets of this set. [e]
  • Measure space [r]: Set together with a sigma-algebra of subsets of the set and a measure defined on this sigma-algebra. [e]
  • Normal distribution [r]: a symmetrical bell-shaped probability distribution representing the frequency of random variations of a quantity from its mean. [e]
  • Sigma algebra [r]: A formal mathematical structure intended among other things to provide a rigid basis for measure theory and axiomatic probability theory. [e]
  • Statistics theory [r]: A branch of mathematics that specializes in enumeration, or counted, data and their relation to measured data. [e]
  • Stochastic convergence [r]: A mathematical concept intended to formalize the idea that a sequence of essentially random or unpredictable events sometimes is expected to settle into a pattern. [e]
  • Stochastic process [r]: Family of random variables, dependent upon a parameter which usually denotes time. [e]