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  2. Skewness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skewness

    Example distribution with positive skewness. These data are from experiments on wheat grass growth. In probability theory and statistics, skewness is a measure of the asymmetry of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable about its mean. The skewness value can be positive, zero, negative, or undefined.

  3. Kurtosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurtosis

    Kurtosis calculator; Free Online Software (Calculator) computes various types of skewness and kurtosis statistics for any dataset (includes small and large sample tests).. Kurtosis on the Earliest known uses of some of the words of mathematics; Celebrating 100 years of Kurtosis a history of the topic, with different measures of kurtosis.

  4. Shape of a probability distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_of_a_probability...

    The shape of a distribution will fall somewhere in a continuum where a flat distribution might be considered central and where types of departure from this include: mounded (or unimodal), U-shaped, J-shaped, reverse-J shaped and multi-modal. [1]

  5. L-moment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-moment

    For a random variable X, the r th population L-moment is [1] = = () ⁡ { : } , where X k:n denotes the k th order statistic (k th smallest value) in an independent sample of size n from the distribution of X and denotes expected value operator.

  6. Jarque–Bera test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jarque–Bera_test

    In statistics, the Jarque–Bera test is a goodness-of-fit test of whether sample data have the skewness and kurtosis matching a normal distribution. The test is named after Carlos Jarque and Anil K. Bera. The test statistic is always nonnegative. If it is far from zero, it signals the data do not have a normal distribution.

  7. D'Agostino's K-squared test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D'Agostino's_K-squared_test

    The sample skewness g 1 and kurtosis g 2 are both asymptotically normal. However, the rate of their convergence to the distribution limit is frustratingly slow, especially for g 2 . For example even with n = 5000 observations the sample kurtosis g 2 has both the skewness and the kurtosis of approximately 0.3, which is not negligible.

  8. Shape parameter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_parameter

    Most simply, they can be estimated in terms of the higher moments, using the method of moments, as in the skewness (3rd moment) or kurtosis (4th moment), if the higher moments are defined and finite. Estimators of shape often involve higher-order statistics (non-linear functions of the data), as in the higher moments, but linear estimators also ...

  9. Skewed generalized t distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skewed_generalized_t...

    where is the beta function, is the location parameter, > is the scale parameter, < < is the skewness parameter, and > and > are the parameters that control the kurtosis. and are not parameters, but functions of the other parameters that are used here to scale or shift the distribution appropriately to match the various parameterizations of this distribution.