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  2. Bootstrap error-adjusted single-sample technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bootstrap_error-adjusted...

    [clarification needed] [3] BEST is based on a population, P, relative to some hyperspace, R, that represents the universe of possible samples. P * is the realized values of P based on a calibration set, T. T is used to find all possible variation in P. P * is bound by parameters C and B. C is the expectation value of P, written E(P), and B is a ...

  3. Bootstrapping (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bootstrapping_(statistics)

    The bootstrap sample is taken from the original by using sampling with replacement (e.g. we might 'resample' 5 times from [1,2,3,4,5] and get [2,5,4,4,1]), so, assuming N is sufficiently large, for all practical purposes there is virtually zero probability that it will be identical to the original "real" sample. This process is repeated a large ...

  4. Resampling (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resampling_(statistics)

    The best example of the plug-in principle, the bootstrapping method. Bootstrapping is a statistical method for estimating the sampling distribution of an estimator by sampling with replacement from the original sample, most often with the purpose of deriving robust estimates of standard errors and confidence intervals of a population parameter like a mean, median, proportion, odds ratio ...

  5. Nelson rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nelson_rules

    The above eight rules apply to a chart of a variable value. A second chart, the moving range chart, can also be used but only with rules 1, 2, 3 and 4. Such a chart plots a graph of the maximum value - minimum value of N adjacent points against the time sample of the range.

  6. Jackknife resampling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackknife_resampling

    The jackknife pre-dates other common resampling methods such as the bootstrap. Given a sample of size n {\displaystyle n} , a jackknife estimator can be built by aggregating the parameter estimates from each subsample of size ( n − 1 ) {\displaystyle (n-1)} obtained by omitting one observation.

  7. Tape correction (surveying) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tape_correction_(surveying)

    For common tape measurements, the tape used is a steel tape with coefficient of thermal expansion C equal to 0.000,011,6 units per unit length per degree Celsius change. This means that the tape changes length by 1.16 mm per 10 m tape per 10 °C change from the standard temperature of the tape.

  8. Breakpoint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakpoint

    Without hardware support (and in multitasking environments), debuggers have to implement breakpoints in software. For instruction breakpoints, this is a comparatively simple task of replacing the instruction at the location of the breakpoint by either: an instruction that calls the debugger directly (e.g. a system call, or int3 in case of x86) or

  9. Structural break - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_break

    The sup-Wald, sup-LM, and sup-LR tests are asymptotic in general (i.e., the asymptotic critical values for these tests are applicable for sample size n as n → ∞), [11] and involve the assumption of homoskedasticity across break points for finite samples; [4] however, an exact test with the sup-Wald statistic may be obtained for a linear ...