Originally posted by teapot418
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Data science and predictability of outcomes.
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I find coffee grounds more predictable..."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR -
Did you do a postgrad stats course or something?Originally posted by scooterscot View PostWhere did I say probabilistic prediction requires historical data? I said it requires a similar event. You could create such an event with which to make your prediction. Stochastic processes don't care for time.
Deterministic prediction never makes use historical data either. That's a major slip up in education that is. They measure the likelihood of events through measurement of some quantity.
All sorts of deterministic models make use of historical data to estimate their parameters without introducing any stochastic terms. As I said, it's a modelling choice. No idea what you're on about with regard to "similar event" or the time invariance of a stochastic process or "likelihood" w/r to a deterministic prediction. I think you're getting confused by stationarity or, perhaps, just in general.
An event is simply a subset of a sample space. You don't need a "similar" event to make a prediction, you need a model, which may or may not have parameters to estimate from data.
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Having recently worked with a genuine in-memory analytics tool, it does anything except speed things up!Originally posted by greenlake View PostComment
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What a dumb question.Originally posted by minestrone View PostWhy have our resident data scientists not predicted brexit?
I think alcohol has addled your brain.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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tea leaves got it wrong Scotland is still thereOriginally posted by greenlake View Post
"Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark TwainComment
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Scooter is simply a thick fraud. Hth.Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostDid you do a postgrad stats course or something?
All sorts of deterministic models make use of historical data to estimate their parameters without introducing any stochastic terms. As I said, it's a modelling choice. No idea what you're on about with regard to "similar event" or the time invariance of a stochastic process or "likelihood" w/r to a deterministic prediction. I think you're getting confused by stationarity or, perhaps, just in general.
An event is simply a subset of a sample space. You don't need a "similar" event to make a prediction, you need a model, which may or may not have parameters to estimate from data.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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oh dear the 'No brainers' are falling out. Next Darmy will be crying into his milk.Originally posted by sasguru View PostScooter is simply a thick fraud. Hth.Comment
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FTFY.Originally posted by scooterscot View Posttea leaves got it wrong Scotland is still moaningComment
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Since a crazy black-swan event is one that's hard to predict, that's fairly self evident. But thanks for sharing.Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostBecause it's hard to predict crazy black-swan events?
Any number of reasons. Perhaps they didn't apply their skills to it. Perhaps they didn't have access to the data. Perhaps the process is chaotic - so deterministic but not predictable (sensitive to very small changes in the initial conditions).Originally posted by minestrone View PostWhy have our resident data scientists not predicted brexit?Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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