Chi-squared distribution
Release: |
4.6 • 5.0 • 5.1 • 5.2 • 5.3 • 5.4 • 6.0 • 6.1 • 6.2 • 6.3 • 6.4 • 6.5 |
---|
The [math]\displaystyle{ \Chi^2 }[/math]-squared distribution is a continuous, positive only, unimodal probability distribution that describes the sum of independent normally-distributed random variables.
The Chi-squared distribution with «dof» degrees of freedom describes the distribution of a Chi-Squared metric defined as
- [math]\displaystyle{ \Chi^2 \sum_{i=1}^n {y_i}^2 }[/math]
where each yi is independently sampled from a standard normal distribution and «dof» = n - 1 . The distribution is defined over nonnegative values.
The Chi-squared distribution is commonly used for analyses of second moments, such as analyses of variance and contingency table analyses. The ratio of two chi-squared-distributed variables follows an F-distribution.
Functions
ChiSquared(dof)
The distribution function. Use this to define a chance variable or other uncertain quantity with an F-distribution with «dof» degrees of freedom.
DensChiSquared(x, dof)
The analytic probability density at «x». Equal to
- [math]\displaystyle{ p(x) = {1\over{2^{d/2} \Gamma(d/2)}} x^{d/2-1} e^{-x/2} }[/math]
where [math]\displaystyle{ d }[/math] is «dof» and [math]\displaystyle{ \Gamma(x) }[/math] is the GammaFn(x)
.
CumChiSquared(x, dof)
The analytic cumulative density up to «x». This is the probability that a random sample will be less than or equal to «x».
CumChiSquaredInv(p, dof)
The inverse cumulative density (quantile function), which computes the pth fractile/quantile/percentile value x, which has a «p» probability of being greater than or equal to a random variate draw from a chi-squared distribution with «dof» degrees of freedom.
Statistics
Theoretical statistics (i.e., in the absence of sampling error) are:
- Mean = dof
- Mode = k-2 when k>2, 0 otherwise
- Median = ...
- Variance = 2 * dof
- Skewness = [math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{ 8 / dof} }[/math]
- Kurtosis = 12 / dof
Examples
Suppose
Variable V := ChiSquared(k)
Variable W := ChiSquared(m)
Variable S := (V/k)*(W/m)
S
is distributed as an F-distribution with k
and m
degrees of freedom.
The F distribution is useful for the analysis of ratios of variance, such as a one-factor between-subjects analysis of variance.
See Also
- Dens_ChiSquared
- CumChiSquared
- Normal
- Gamma -- very closely related distribution.
- Rayleigh
- F-distribution
- Parametric continuous distributions
- Distribution Densities Library
Enable comment auto-refresher