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The uniform distribution or rectangular distribution on [a,b], where all points in a finite interval are equally likely, is a special case of the four-parameter Beta distribution. The Irwin–Hall distribution is the distribution of the sum of n independent random variables, each of which having the uniform distribution on [0,1].
Gårding (1997) comments that although the ideas in the transformative book by Schwartz (1951) were not entirely new, it was Schwartz's broad attack and conviction that distributions would be useful almost everywhere in analysis that made the difference. A detailed history of the theory of distributions was given by Lützen (1982).
This page lists articles related to probability theory.In particular, it lists many articles corresponding to specific probability distributions.Such articles are marked here by a code of the form (X:Y), which refers to number of random variables involved and the type of the distribution.
The modern mathematical theory of probability has its roots in attempts to analyze games of chance by Gerolamo Cardano in the sixteenth century, and by Pierre de Fermat and Blaise Pascal in the seventeenth century (for example the "problem of points"). [3] Christiaan Huygens published a book on the subject in 1657. [4]
This is a list of probability topics. It overlaps with the (alphabetical) list of statistical topics. There are also the outline of probability and catalog of articles in probability theory. For distributions, see List of probability distributions. For journals, see list of probability journals.
An analysis of income distribution; Zipf List of French words Archived 2007-06-23 at the Wayback Machine; Zipf list for English, French, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, Icelandic, Latin, Portuguese and Finnish from Gutenberg Project and online calculator to rank words in texts Archived 2011-04-08 at the Wayback Machine; Citations and the Zipf ...
Pages in category "Theory of probability distributions" The following 74 pages are in this category, out of 74 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In algebra and number theory, a distribution is a function on a system of finite sets into an abelian group which is analogous to an integral: it is thus the algebraic analogue of a distribution in the sense of generalised function. The original examples of distributions occur, unnamed, as functions φ on Q/Z satisfying [1]