Linganisha mbinu
Pitia mbinu ulizochagua bega kwa bega; safu zinazotofautiana zinaangaziwa.
| Uigaji wa Bootstrap× | Uthibitisho wa Kibayes× | |
|---|---|---|
| Nyanja≠ | Uigaji | Takwimu |
| Familia≠ | Process / pipeline | Bayesian methods |
| Mwaka wa asili≠ | 1979 | 1763 |
| Mwanzilishi≠ | Bradley Efron | Thomas Bayes; Pierre-Simon Laplace |
| Aina≠ | Simulation-based nonparametric inference | Probabilistic inference paradigm |
| Chanzo asilia≠ | Efron, B. & Tibshirani, R.J. (1993). An Introduction to the Bootstrap. Chapman & Hall/CRC. DOI ↗ | Bayes, T. (1763). An essay towards solving a problem in the doctrine of chances. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 53, 370–418. link ↗ |
| Majina mbadala≠ | bootstrap resampling, empirical resampling, nonparametric bootstrap, Önyükleme Simülasyonu (Bootstrap Resampling) | Bayes inference, Bayesian statistics, Bayesian updating, posterior inference |
| Zinazohusiana≠ | 5 | 3 |
| Muhtasari≠ | Bootstrap simulation, introduced by Bradley Efron in 1979, is a simulation-based inference method that derives the sampling distribution of virtually any statistic by repeatedly resampling with replacement from the observed data. Because it requires no parametric distributional assumptions, it provides a robust, general-purpose alternative to analytical confidence intervals and parametric hypothesis tests across continuous, ordinal, binary, and count data. | Bayesian inference is a statistical paradigm in which probability represents degrees of belief rather than long-run frequencies. It encodes prior knowledge about parameters in a prior distribution, combines that prior with the likelihood of observed data via Bayes' theorem, and produces a posterior distribution that quantifies updated uncertainty. The foundational theorem was published posthumously by Thomas Bayes in 1763 and subsequently systematized by Pierre-Simon Laplace in his 1812 Théorie analytique des probabilités. |
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