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Bimodal Distribution: Definition, Examples & Analysis. By Jim Frost 2 Comments. A bimodal distribution has two peaks. In the context of a continuous probability distribution, modes are peaks in the distribution. The graph below shows a bimodal distribution.
24 cze 2020 · A bimodal distribution is a probability distribution with two modes. We often use the term “mode” in descriptive statistics to refer to the most commonly occurring value in a dataset, but in this case the term “mode” refers to a local maximum in a chart.
1 gru 2017 · In this paper, we are interested in the last case, particularly that of two peaks. Histograms with two peaks are called bimodal, and those with only one peak are called unimodal. An example of a bimodal histogram is shown in Figure 2b, which summarizes a dataset containing mean temperatures observed in July and in September. Here bimodality is ...
2 cze 2021 · Bimodal distributions play an important role in the applied statistical literature; see, for example, Eu-gene et al. (2002) and Hassan and El-Bassiouni (2016).
1 maj 2021 · In this paper, a new family of continuous random variables with non-necessarily symmetric densities is introduced. Its density function can incorporate unimodality and bimodality features. Special attention is paid to the normal distribution which is included as a particular case.
20 lis 2018 · Introduction. A two-sided framework of univariate distributions. PDF and CDF of TS-EP distributions. Maximum Likelihood Estimation. A comparison of the Joint TS-EP fit to a bivariate mixture model fit. Concluding Remarks. Some References.
This paper introduces existing univariate bimodal probability distributions for modeling these types of data efficiently in an undergraduate curriculum. Those distributions are flexible and in closed form. Some examples, using real-world data, are presented to demonstrate the importance of these distributions. 1.