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AMS 315/576 Lecture Notes Chapter 10. CATEGORICAL DATA
AMS 315/576 Lecture Notes Chapter 10. CATEGORICAL DATA

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http://dept - Binus Repository

... Thus, the distriubtion of lists should correspond to the distribution of possible outcomes of the random variable. Of course, not all lists of numbers correspond to outcomes of a random variable… but, in this course, we are interested in the ones that do. ...
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... Another large department store has found that 10% of all DVD players purchased in any given year are returned. The manager of the department store is concerned about the number of DVD players which are returned but are not faulty. Data available indicates that 8% of all DVDs are faulty. It is found ...
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... mean but not a standard deviation. A reasonable standard deviation is 35 pounds. Weights are not normally distributed, especially when the population includes both men and women, but they are not very nonnormal. A commuter plane carries 19 passengers. What is the approximate probability that the tot ...
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... 8. What conditions must be met in order to use z procedures for inference about two proportions? ...
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Probability box



A probability box (or p-box) is a characterization of an uncertain number consisting of both aleatoric and epistemic uncertainties that is often used in risk analysis or quantitative uncertainty modeling where numerical calculations must be performed. Probability bounds analysis is used to make arithmetic and logical calculations with p-boxes.An example p-box is shown in the figure at right for an uncertain number x consisting of a left (upper) bound and a right (lower) bound on the probability distribution for x. The bounds are coincident for values of x below 0 and above 24. The bounds may have almost any shapes, including step functions, so long as they are monotonically increasing and do not cross each other. A p-box is used to express simultaneously incertitude (epistemic uncertainty), which is represented by the breadth between the left and right edges of the p-box, and variability (aleatory uncertainty), which is represented by the overall slant of the p-box.
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