Summary table of probability terms: Difference between revisions

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** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2233721/the-true-domain-of-random-variables
** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2233721/the-true-domain-of-random-variables
** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/712734/domain-of-a-random-variable-sample-space-or-probability-space
** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/712734/domain-of-a-random-variable-sample-space-or-probability-space
** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/23006/the-role-of-the-hidden-probability-space-on-which-random-variables-are-defined
** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1612012/how-should-i-understand-the-probability-space-omega-mathcalf-p-what-d
** https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2531810/why-does-probability-theory-insist-on-sample-spaces

Revision as of 09:18, 1 January 2018

This page is a summary table of probability terms.

Table

Term Symbol Type Definition
Reals R
Borel subsets of the reals B
Sample space Ω
Outcome ω Ω
Events or measurable sets F
Probability measure P or Pr or PF F[0,1]
Probability triple or probability space (Ω,F,P)
Distribution μ or D or D or PB or L(X) or PX1 B[0,1] BP(XB)
Induced probability space (R,B,μ)
Cumulative distribution function or CDF FX R[0,1]
Probability density function or PDF fX R[0,)
Random variable X ΩR
Indicator of A 1A Ω{0,1}
Expectation E or E (ΩR)R

Dependencies

Let (Ω,F,P) be a probability space.

  • Given a random variable, we can compute its distribution.
  • Given a random variable, we can compute the probability density function.
  • Given a random variable, we can compute the cumulative distribution function.
  • Given a distribution, we can retrieve a random variable. But this random variable is not unique? This is why we can say stuff like "let XD".
  • Given a cumulative distribution function, we can compute the random variable. (Right?)
  • Given a probability density function, can we get everything else? Don't we just have to integrate to get the cdf, which gets us the random variable and the distribution?

See also

External links