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  2. Kurtosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurtosis

    Excess kurtosis, typically compared to a value of 0, characterizes the “tailedness” of a distribution. A univariate normal distribution has an excess kurtosis of 0. Negative excess kurtosis indicates a platykurtic distribution, which doesn’t necessarily have a flat top but produces fewer or less extreme outliers than the normal distribution.

  3. Kurtosis risk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurtosis_risk

    Kurtosis risk applies to any kurtosis-related quantitative model that assumes the normal distribution for certain of its independent variables when the latter may in fact have kurtosis much greater than does the normal distribution. Kurtosis risk is commonly referred to as "fat tail" risk. The "fat tail" metaphor explicitly describes the ...

  4. Normal probability plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_probability_plot

    The normal probability plot is a graphical technique to identify substantive departures from normality.This includes identifying outliers, skewness, kurtosis, a need for transformations, and mixtures.

  5. Probability distribution fitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probability_distribution...

    The first two are very similar, while the last, with one degree of freedom, has "heavier tails" meaning that the values farther away from the mean occur relatively more often (i.e. the kurtosis is higher). The Cauchy distribution is also symmetric. Skew distributions to the right. Skewness to left and right

  6. Talk:Kurtosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Kurtosis

    Hence it is useful to have a measure of tail heaviness. One such measure is kurtosis...Statistical literature sometimes reports that kurtosis measures the peakedness of a density. However, heavy tails have much more influence on kurtosis than does the shape of the distribution near the mean (Kaplansky 1945; Ali 1974; Johnson, et al. 1980)."

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  8. Standard deviation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_deviation

    The third population has a much smaller standard deviation than the other two because its values are all close to 7. These standard deviations have the same units as the data points themselves. If, for instance, the data set {0, 6, 8, 14} represents the ages of a population of four siblings in years, the standard deviation is 5 years.

  9. Fat-tailed distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat-tailed_distribution

    A fat-tailed distribution is a probability distribution that exhibits a large skewness or kurtosis, relative to that of either a normal distribution or an exponential distribution. [when defined as?] In common usage, the terms fat-tailed and heavy-tailed are sometimes synonymous; fat-tailed is sometimes also defined as a subset of heavy-tailed ...