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  2. Weighted arithmetic mean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_arithmetic_mean

    The notion of weighted mean plays a role in descriptive statistics and also occurs in a more general form in several other areas of mathematics. If all the weights are equal, then the weighted mean is the same as the arithmetic mean .

  3. Weighted statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_statistics

    In statistics, there are many applications of "weighting": Weighted mean; Weighted harmonic mean; Weighted geometric mean; Weighted least squares

  4. Central tendency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_tendency

    Weighted arithmetic mean an arithmetic mean that incorporates weighting to certain data elements. Truncated mean or trimmed mean the arithmetic mean of data values after a certain number or proportion of the highest and lowest data values have been discarded. Interquartile mean a truncated mean based on data within the interquartile range. Midrange

  5. Weight function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight_function

    Weighted means are commonly used in statistics to compensate for the presence of bias.For a quantity measured multiple independent times with variance, the best estimate of the signal is obtained by averaging all the measurements with weight = /, and the resulting variance is smaller than each of the independent measurements = /.

  6. Mean absolute percentage error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mean_absolute_percentage_error

    It is a measure used to evaluate the performance of regression or forecasting models. It is a variant of MAPE in which the mean absolute percent errors is treated as a weighted arithmetic mean. Most commonly the absolute percent errors are weighted by the actuals (e.g. in case of sales forecasting, errors are weighted by sales volume). [3]

  7. Inverse probability weighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse_probability_weighting

    One very early weighted estimator is the Horvitz–Thompson estimator of the mean. [3] When the sampling probability is known, from which the sampling population is drawn from the target population, then the inverse of this probability is used to weight the observations. This approach has been generalized to many aspects of statistics under ...

  8. Inverse-variance weighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-variance_weighting

    For normally distributed random variables inverse-variance weighted averages can also be derived as the maximum likelihood estimate for the true value. Furthermore, from a Bayesian perspective the posterior distribution for the true value given normally distributed observations and a flat prior is a normal distribution with the inverse-variance weighted average as a mean and variance ().

  9. Meta-analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meta-analysis

    Results from studies are combined using different approaches. One approach frequently used in meta-analysis in health care research is termed 'inverse variance method'. The average effect size across all studies is computed as a weighted mean, whereby the weights are equal to the inverse variance of each study's effect estimator. Larger studies ...