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The negative binomial distribution NB(r,p) can be represented as a compound Poisson distribution: Let () denote a sequence of independent and identically distributed random variables, each one having the logarithmic series distribution Log(p), with probability mass function
There is no simple formula for the entropy of a Poisson binomial distribution, but the entropy is bounded above by the entropy of a binomial distribution with the same number parameter and the same mean. Therefore, the entropy is also bounded above by the entropy of a Poisson distribution with the same mean. [7]
If X is a negative binomial random variable with r large, P near 1, and r(1 − P) = λ, then X approximately has a Poisson distribution with mean λ. Consequences of the CLT: If X is a Poisson random variable with large mean, then for integers j and k , P( j ≤ X ≤ k ) approximately equals to P ( j − 1/2 ≤ Y ≤ k + 1/2) where Y is a ...
The negative binomial distribution or Pascal distribution, a generalization of the geometric distribution to the nth success. The discrete compound Poisson distribution; The parabolic fractal distribution; The Poisson distribution, which describes a
The (a,b,0) class of distributions is also known as the Panjer, [1] [2] the Poisson-type or the Katz family of distributions, [3] [4] and may be retrieved through the Conway–Maxwell–Poisson distribution. Only the Poisson, binomial and negative binomial distributions satisfy the full form of this
Negative binomial regression is a popular generalization of Poisson regression because it loosens the highly restrictive assumption that the variance is equal to the mean made by the Poisson model. The traditional negative binomial regression model is based on the Poisson-gamma mixture distribution.
Poisson-type random measures are a family of three random counting measures which are closed under restriction to a subspace, i.e. closed under thinning. They are the only distributions in the canonical non-negative power series family of distributions to possess this property and include the Poisson distribution, negative binomial distribution, and binomial distribution. [1]
In probability theory and statistics, the Poisson distribution (/ ˈ p w ɑː s ɒ n /; French pronunciation:) is a discrete probability distribution that expresses the probability of a given number of events occurring in a fixed interval of time if these events occur with a known constant mean rate and independently of the time since the last event. [1]