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  2. List of probability distributions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_probability...

    The Cauchy distribution, an example of a distribution which does not have an expected value or a variance. In physics it is usually called a Lorentzian profile , and is associated with many processes, including resonance energy distribution, impact and natural spectral line broadening and quadratic stark line broadening.

  3. Distribution law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_law

    Where K d is called the distribution coefficient or the partition coefficient. Concentration of X in solvent A/concentration of X in solvent B=Kď If C 1 denotes the concentration of solute X in solvent A & C 2 denotes the concentration of solute X in solvent B; Nernst's distribution law can be expressed as C 1 /C 2 = K d. This law is only ...

  4. Binomial distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binomial_distribution

    The following is an example of applying a continuity correction. Suppose one wishes to calculate Pr(X ≤ 8) for a binomial random variable X. If Y has a distribution given by the normal approximation, then Pr(X ≤ 8) is approximated by Pr(Y ≤ 8.5). The addition of 0.5 is the continuity correction; the uncorrected normal approximation gives ...

  5. Probability plot correlation coefficient plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probability_plot...

    It indicates whether a distribution is short or long tailed and it can further indicate several common distributions. Specifically, λ = −1: distribution is approximately Cauchy; λ = 0: distribution is exactly logistic; λ = 0.14: distribution is approximately normal; λ = 0.5: distribution is U-shaped; λ = 1: distribution is exactly ...

  6. Weibull distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weibull_distribution

    In probability theory and statistics, the Weibull distribution / ˈ w aɪ b ʊ l / is a continuous probability distribution. It models a broad range of random variables, largely in the nature of a time to failure or time between events. Examples are maximum one-day rainfalls and the time a user spends on a web page.

  7. Bernoulli distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernoulli_distribution

    The Bernoulli distribution is a special case of the binomial distribution with = [4] The kurtosis goes to infinity for high and low values of p , {\displaystyle p,} but for p = 1 / 2 {\displaystyle p=1/2} the two-point distributions including the Bernoulli distribution have a lower excess kurtosis , namely −2, than any other probability ...

  8. Kurtosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurtosis

    The most prominent example of a mesokurtic distribution is the normal distribution family, regardless of the values of its parameters. A few other well-known distributions can be mesokurtic, depending on parameter values: for example, the binomial distribution is mesokurtic for p = 1 / 2 ± 1 / 12 {\textstyle p=1/2\pm {\sqrt {1/12}}} .

  9. Location–scale family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Location–scale_family

    The example here is of the Student's t-distribution, which is normally provided in R only in its standard form, with a single degrees of freedom parameter df. The versions below with _ls appended show how to generalize this to a generalized Student's t-distribution with an arbitrary location parameter m and scale parameter s .