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  2. Random walk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_walk

    Five eight-step random walks from a central point. Some paths appear shorter than eight steps where the route has doubled back on itself. (animated version)In mathematics, a random walk, sometimes known as a drunkard's walk, is a stochastic process that describes a path that consists of a succession of random steps on some mathematical space.

  3. Accelerometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accelerometer

    An accelerometer measures proper acceleration, which is the acceleration it experiences relative to freefall and is the acceleration felt by people and objects. [2] Put another way, at any point in spacetime the equivalence principle guarantees the existence of a local inertial frame, and an accelerometer measures the acceleration relative to that frame. [4]

  4. Mental chronometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_chronometry

    Although its mechanistic underpinnings are still debated, the relationship between RT and cognitive ability today is as well-established an empirical fact as any phenomenon in psychology. [3] A 2008 literature review on the mean correlation between various measures of reaction time and intelligence was found to be −0.24 ( SD = 0.07).

  5. Heterogeneous random walk in one dimension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterogeneous_random_walk...

    The actual random walk obeys a stochastic equation of motion, but its probability density function (PDF) obeys a deterministic equation. PDFs of random walks can be formulated in terms of the (discrete in space) master equation [1] [12] [13] and the generalized master equation [3] or the (continuous in space and time) Fokker Planck equation [37] and its generalizations. [10]

  6. Modal analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modal_analysis

    Car's door attached to an electromagnetic shaker. A photograph showing the test set-up of a MIMO test on a wind turbine rotor. The blades are excited using three mechanical shakers and the response is measured using 12 accelerometers mounted to Blade 3; in the next stage of the test, the accelerometers can be moved to Blade 2 and 3 to measure response at those locations.

  7. The Drunkard's Walk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Drunkard's_Walk

    The Drunkard's Walk discusses the role of randomness in everyday events, and the cognitive biases that lead people to misinterpret random events and stochastic processes. The title refers to a certain type of random walk, a mathematical process in which one or more variables change value under a series of random steps.

  8. How To Use the 'Run/Walk' Method To Lose Weight

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/run-walk-method-lose...

    The "run/walk" method is an excellent form of cardio to help you lose weight and build endurance. And, as the name suggests, it calls for you to alternate between walking and running, which will ...

  9. Allan variance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_variance

    Allan variance is defined as one half of the time average of the squares of the differences between successive readings of the frequency deviation sampled over the sampling period.