Frequentist Probability
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A Frequentist Probability is an Event Probability that is defined as the limit of its relative frequency in many trials.
- Example(s):
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- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Probability Theory, Principle of Indifference, Interpretation of Probability, Probability, Limit of a Sequence, Frequency, Classical Definition of Probability.
References
2021
- (Wikipedia, 2021) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequentist_probability Retrieved:2021-12-31.
- Frequentist probability or frequentism is an interpretation of probability; it defines an event's probability as the limit of its relative frequency in many trials. Probabilities can be found (in principle) by a repeatable objective process (and are thus ideally devoid of opinion). This interpretation supports the statistical needs of many experimental scientists and pollsters. It does not support all needs, however; gamblers typically require estimates of the odds without experiments.
The development of the frequentist account was motivated by the problems and paradoxes of the previously dominant viewpoint, the classical interpretation. In the classical interpretation, probability was defined in terms of the principle of indifference, based on the natural symmetry of a problem, so, e.g. the probabilities of dice games arise from the natural symmetric 6-sidedness of the cube. This classical interpretation stumbled at any statistical problem that has no natural symmetry for reasoning.
- Frequentist probability or frequentism is an interpretation of probability; it defines an event's probability as the limit of its relative frequency in many trials. Probabilities can be found (in principle) by a repeatable objective process (and are thus ideally devoid of opinion). This interpretation supports the statistical needs of many experimental scientists and pollsters. It does not support all needs, however; gamblers typically require estimates of the odds without experiments.