carllacan
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Why are there so many physical processes which are described (with more or less accuracy) by a normal distribution?
D H said:A more nefarious reason: It's easy. The normal distribution is extremely amenable to analysis. People oftentimes use a normal distribution when they shouldn't be doing that. I myself have been committed that statistical crime.
Filip Larsen said:The short answer is, that it is due to the Central Limit Theorem [1].
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_limit_theorem
carllacan said:I'm reading on the CLT and I'm getting more and more confused. I'm getting the idea that according to it every physical experiment would end up giving a normal distribution, but that is obviously false. Can someone clear my head?
Very interesting. And why is it that the normal distribution has the most entropy?
carllacan said:And why is it that the normal distribution has the most entropy?
Stephen Tashi said:"Normal distribution" refers to a family of distributions and not all members of that family have the same entropy. Is isn't clear what you mean by "the" normal distribution.
carllacan said:Why are there so many physical processes which are described (with more or less accuracy) by a normal distribution?
Is there a "proof" that the normal distribution is, in fact, the binomial distribution as n approaches infinity?
If so, that would explain a lot.