Thejas15101998
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I did not understand of the non-existence of variance.
What does it mean?
What does it mean?
The discussion revolves around the existence of the mean and variance of the Cauchy distribution, exploring theoretical implications, definitions, and references to literature. Participants engage in clarifying concepts related to statistical distributions, particularly focusing on the Cauchy distribution's properties and comparisons with other distributions.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the existence of the mean and variance of the Cauchy distribution, with multiple competing views and interpretations presented throughout the discussion.
Participants highlight the complexity of defining mean and variance for distributions like the Cauchy and Pareto, indicating that definitions may depend on the context and assumptions made. There are unresolved mathematical nuances regarding the behavior of these distributions.
yes.Dale said:I have never heard of that. Do you have a reference?
Thejas15101998 said:yes.
Refer to Philip Bevington's book on error analysis , pg 11 last paragraph.
micromass said:Can we please stop guessing what the OP means until he gives more information...
Stephen Tashi said:There would be a lot of stalled threads if we followed that policy consistently.
well yes it is the consequence of its slowly decreasing behavior for large deviations.Stephen Tashi said:The Cauchy distribution has no mean and hence (since the definition of the variance of a probability distribution requires that the mean exists) it has no variance.
For an experimental distribution, mean and variance can always be computed. I think you need to clarify what you mean when using the terms: average deviation, standard deviation, variance.Thejas15101998 said: