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  2. Median graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median_graph

    The median of three vertices in a tree, showing the subtree formed by the union of shortest paths between the vertices. Every tree is a median graph. To see this, observe that in a tree, the union of the three shortest paths between pairs of the three vertices a, b, and c is either itself a path, or a subtree formed by three paths meeting at a single central node with degree three.

  3. Plot (graphics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plot_(graphics)

    The graphs can be used together to determine the economic equilibrium (essentially, to solve an equation). Simple graph used for reading values: the bell-shaped normal or Gaussian probability distribution, from which, for example, the probability of a man's height being in a specified range can be derived, given data for the adult male population.

  4. Clique (graph theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clique_(graph_theory)

    It is an example of median graph, and is associated with a median algebra on the cliques of a graph: the median m(A,B,C) of three cliques A, B, and C is the clique whose vertices belong to at least two of the cliques A, B, and C. [5] The clique-sum is a method for combining two graphs by merging them along a shared clique.

  5. Probability density function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probability_density_function

    In the field of statistical physics, a non-formal reformulation of the relation above between the derivative of the cumulative distribution function and the probability density function is generally used as the definition of the probability density function. This alternate definition is the following:

  6. Median algebra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median_algebra

    A median graph is an undirected graph in which for every three vertices , , and there is a unique vertex ,, that belongs to shortest paths between any two of , , and . If this is the case, then the operation x , y , z {\displaystyle \langle x,y,z\rangle } defines a median algebra having the vertices of the graph as its elements.

  7. Median - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median

    The median of a normal distribution with mean μ and variance σ 2 is μ. In fact, for a normal distribution, mean = median = mode. The median of a uniform distribution in the interval [a, b] is (a + b) / 2, which is also the mean. The median of a Cauchy distribution with location parameter x 0 and scale parameter y is x 0, the location parameter.

  8. Squaregraph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squaregraph

    The squaregraphs include as special cases trees, grid graphs, gear graphs, and the graphs of polyominos.. As well as being planar graphs, squaregraphs are median graphs, meaning that for every three vertices u, v, and w there is a unique median vertex m(u,v,w) that lies on shortest paths between each pair of the three vertices. [1]

  9. Graph theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_theory

    Graphs as defined in the two definitions above cannot have loops, because a loop joining a vertex to itself is the edge (for an undirected simple graph) or is incident on (for an undirected multigraph) {,} = {} which is not in {{,},}. To allow loops, the definitions must be expanded.