Understanding Inverse Document Frequency: On theoretical
... appealing to the intuition outlined above. However, some reference was made to the wellknown Zipf law concerning term frequencies (Zipf, 1949). One version of Zipf’s law is that if we rank words in order of decreasing frequency in a large body of text, and plot a graph of the log of frequency agains ...
... appealing to the intuition outlined above. However, some reference was made to the wellknown Zipf law concerning term frequencies (Zipf, 1949). One version of Zipf’s law is that if we rank words in order of decreasing frequency in a large body of text, and plot a graph of the log of frequency agains ...
Utility theory - Create and Use Your home.uchicago.edu Account
... with the expected monetary value, it makes your certainty equivalent something that is straightforward to compute or estimate by simulation. So what we need now is to find more general formulas that risk-averse decision-makers can use to compute their certainty equivalents for complex gambles and mo ...
... with the expected monetary value, it makes your certainty equivalent something that is straightforward to compute or estimate by simulation. So what we need now is to find more general formulas that risk-averse decision-makers can use to compute their certainty equivalents for complex gambles and mo ...
Recurrence vs Transience: An introduction to random walks
... Example 1 (A regular tree). Consider the regular tree of degree three T3 (i.e. the only connected tree for which every vertex has exactly 3 neighbors). The random walk on T3 is clearly transient. Can you give a proof ? Example 2 (The Canopy tree). The Canopy tree is an infinite tree seen from the ca ...
... Example 1 (A regular tree). Consider the regular tree of degree three T3 (i.e. the only connected tree for which every vertex has exactly 3 neighbors). The random walk on T3 is clearly transient. Can you give a proof ? Example 2 (The Canopy tree). The Canopy tree is an infinite tree seen from the ca ...
ON BERNOULLI DECOMPOSITIONS FOR RANDOM VARIABLES
... for specific applications. Nevertheless, it has the benefit of providing a simple perspective on a number of topics. In our second application, we establish spectral localization for a broad class of continuum, alloy-type random Schrödinger operators (cf. (4.1)), building on a result of J. Bourgain ...
... for specific applications. Nevertheless, it has the benefit of providing a simple perspective on a number of topics. In our second application, we establish spectral localization for a broad class of continuum, alloy-type random Schrödinger operators (cf. (4.1)), building on a result of J. Bourgain ...
Rationality and the Bayesian Paradigm
... minor restrictions such as monotonicity or concavity. In a sense, rationality ceased to be a matter of content, and became a matter of form. Towards the end of the 20th century, partly due to attacks based on psychological findings, economics started questioning the axioms that defined rationality. ...
... minor restrictions such as monotonicity or concavity. In a sense, rationality ceased to be a matter of content, and became a matter of form. Towards the end of the 20th century, partly due to attacks based on psychological findings, economics started questioning the axioms that defined rationality. ...