I have noted Steve Simon's advice regarding limits on sample populations
and his reference to Hahn and Meeker' book "Statistical Intervals".
This is one of the most satisfying texts I have read in several years.
The material is well and succinctly presented and the examples are
illuminating. It ha
I'm running proportional odds models for ordinal outcomes using proc
multilog in SUDAAN. SUDAAN doesn't seem to provide the test for the
proportional odds assumption. Can anyone tell me if that test is in fact
available (as it is in SAS)?
===
- Forwarded message from Bill Jefferys -
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(dennis roberts) wrote:
#so, what does the multiplicative "law" in probability mean then?
If A is an event and B is an event, then the probability of the event
A&B is given by P(A&B)=P(A)P(B) i
Pardon my interference, but I think there's some confusion regarding the
events here.
When I toss the first round of coins, I get about 1/2 of them heads. No
problema.
Then, when I toss the second time, 1/2 of *those ones that fell heads* (1/4
of the total, .5*.5)
have a chance to be heads again.
We looking for good science links
to create a science portal.
--
Science
We are looking for good science links.
If you now a good science link ad it here. Thanks
Feel free to add your own our if you now a link here.
http://www.belcho.be/bellink/science/sciences/
Also on this link a discussio
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(dennis roberts) wrote:
#so, what does the multiplicative "law" in probability mean then?
If A is an event and B is an event, then the probability of the event
A&B is given by P(A&B)=P(A)P(B) in the case of independence (it is
P(A)P(B|A)=P(B)
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Donald Burrill) wrote:
#On Sat, 21 Oct 2000, Bill Jefferys wrote:
#> However, the combined experiment is 400 heads on 800 trials,
#
#This however is not the _intersection_ of the two specified events.
Sure it is. It's the event I get by firs
anyone who likes fall colors might enjoy some of these pics ... if you want
to use them in any way ... fine by me
http://community.webshots.com/album/6003455WVyPzlswHT
http://community.webshots.com/album/6003696MOlRFapcVS
=
In
don ... no wonder students go bananas in statistics ... if we "sink" to
this level of discussion about a formula ... a formula that really has so
little utility ... how much time do we spend on the really important ones?
i would submit that for most intro courses ... where correlation is
discu
here are some figures on how much "trash" accumulates at a number of big 10
football stadiums for home football games ...
penn state generates about 40 tons ... and at ohio state, which has a
stadium and fan turnout about the same as penn state, the figure is about
16/17 tons ...
i have NO id
On Sat, 21 Oct 2000, Bill Jefferys wrote:
> At 12:56 PM -0500 10/20/00, dennis roberts wrote:
> >randomly independent events have the p value being the multiplication of
> >each event's p value ... so ... p for getting a head in a good coin
> >is .5 ... 2 in a row = .25 ... etc.
>
> This is
On Sat, 21 Oct 2000, dennis roberts wrote:
> At 06:14 AM 10/21/00 +, Eric Bohlman wrote:
< snip, a couple of quibbles answered by Eric >
> >2a) It demonstrates that variations in the relative sizes of the group
> >will result in variations in the magnitude of the correlation, even i
Hi
I would like to know if anyone knows how to estimate the tail of a
distribution using either Generalised Pareto Distribution (GPD) or
Generalised Gamma Distribution (GGD). I have read a paper by R.L Smith
"ESTIMATING TAILS OF PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTIONS" and that paper is way too
complex for m
13 matches
Mail list logo