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  2. Twinkl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twinkl

    Twinkl was founded by husband and wife Jonathan and Susie Seaton. [2] [3] Susie, a primary school teacher, had noticed there was a lack of ready-made, high-quality educational materials and classroom content available to teachers.

  3. Estimation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimation

    An estimate that turns out to be incorrect will be an overestimate if the estimate exceeds the actual result [3] and an underestimate if the estimate falls short of the actual result. [ 4 ] The confidence in an estimate is quantified as a confidence interval , the likelihood that the estimate is in a certain range.

  4. Guesstimate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guesstimate

    Guesstimate is an informal English portmanteau of guess and estimate, first used by American statisticians in 1934 [1] or 1935. [2] It is defined as an estimate made without using adequate or complete information, [3] [4] or, more strongly, as an estimate arrived at by guesswork or conjecture.

  5. Estimand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimand

    An estimand is a quantity that is to be estimated in a statistical analysis. [1] The term is used to distinguish the target of inference from the method used to obtain an approximation of this target (i.e., the estimator) and the specific value obtained from a given method and dataset (i.e., the estimate). [2]

  6. Estimator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimator

    Bias is a property of the estimator, not of the estimate. Often, people refer to a "biased estimate" or an "unbiased estimate", but they really are talking about an "estimate from a biased estimator", or an "estimate from an unbiased estimator". Also, people often confuse the "error" of a single estimate with the "bias" of an estimator.

  7. Estimation statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimation_statistics

    [2] [3] Estimation statistics is sometimes referred to as the new statistics. [3] [4] [5] The primary aim of estimation methods is to report an effect size (a point estimate) along with its confidence interval, the latter of which is related to the precision of the estimate. [6]

  8. Fermi problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_problem

    Thus one will expect to be within 1 ⁄ 8 to 8 times the correct value – within an order of magnitude, and much less than the worst case of erring by a factor of 2 9 = 512 (about 2.71 orders of magnitude). If one has a shorter chain or estimates more accurately, the overall estimate will be correspondingly better.

  9. Estimating equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimating_equations

    In statistics, the method of estimating equations is a way of specifying how the parameters of a statistical model should be estimated.This can be thought of as a generalisation of many classical methods—the method of moments, least squares, and maximum likelihood—as well as some recent methods like M-estimators.