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  2. Box plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_plot

    In the most straightforward method, the boundary of the lower whisker is the minimum value of the data set, and the boundary of the upper whisker is the maximum value of the data set. Because of this variability, it is appropriate to describe the convention that is being used for the whiskers and outliers in the caption of the box-plot.

  3. Probability bounds analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probability_bounds_analysis

    At about the same time, Makarov, [6] and independently, Rüschendorf [7] solved the problem, originally posed by Kolmogorov, of how to find the upper and lower bounds for the probability distribution of a sum of random variables whose marginal distributions, but not their joint distribution, are known.

  4. Cramér–Rao bound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cramér–Rao_bound

    [6] [7] It is also known as Fréchet-Cramér–Rao or Fréchet-Darmois-Cramér-Rao lower bound. It states that the precision of any unbiased estimator is at most the Fisher information; or (equivalently) the reciprocal of the Fisher information is a lower bound on its variance.

  5. Medcouple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medcouple

    It is then compared to the rest of the matrix to produce candidate red upper and blue lower boundaries. The algorithm then selects the boundary which is known to exclude the global matrix median, by considering the number of entries excluded by this boundary (which is equivalent to considering the rank of the yellow entry).

  6. Copula (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copula_(statistics)

    In probability theory and statistics, a copula is a multivariate cumulative distribution function for which the marginal probability distribution of each variable is uniform on the interval [0, 1]. Copulas are used to describe/model the dependence (inter-correlation) between random variables . [ 1 ]

  7. Upper and lower bounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_and_lower_bounds

    The set S = {42} has 42 as both an upper bound and a lower bound; all other numbers are either an upper bound or a lower bound for that S. Every subset of the natural numbers has a lower bound since the natural numbers have a least element (0 or 1, depending on convention). An infinite subset of the natural numbers cannot be bounded from above.

  8. Iteratively reweighted least squares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iteratively_reweighted...

    IRLS is used to find the maximum likelihood estimates of a generalized linear model, and in robust regression to find an M-estimator, as a way of mitigating the influence of outliers in an otherwise normally-distributed data set, for example, by minimizing the least absolute errors rather than the least square errors.

  9. Isotonic regression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotonic_regression

    In statistics and numerical analysis, isotonic regression or monotonic regression is the technique of fitting a free-form line to a sequence of observations such that the fitted line is non-decreasing (or non-increasing) everywhere, and lies as close to the observations as possible.