Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Biweight_midcorrelation> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 26 of
26
with 100 triples per page.
- Biweight_midcorrelation abstract "In statistics, biweight midcorrelation (also called bicor) is a measure of similarity between samples. It is median-based, rather than mean-based, thus is less sensitive to outliers, and can be a robust alternative to other similarity metrics, such as Pearson correlation or mutual information.".
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageID "47564489".
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageLength "3177".
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageOutDegree "11".
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageRevisionID "679160119".
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Covariance_and_correlation.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Parametric_statistics.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Statistical_dependence.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Mean.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Median.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Median_absolute_deviation.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Mutual_information.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Pearson_product-moment_correlation_coefficient.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink R_(programming_language).
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageWikiLink Weighted_correlation_network_analysis.
- Biweight_midcorrelation hasPhotoCollection Biweight_midcorrelation.
- Biweight_midcorrelation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Biweight_midcorrelation subject Category:Covariance_and_correlation.
- Biweight_midcorrelation subject Category:Parametric_statistics.
- Biweight_midcorrelation subject Category:Statistical_dependence.
- Biweight_midcorrelation hypernym Measure.
- Biweight_midcorrelation type Work.
- Biweight_midcorrelation comment "In statistics, biweight midcorrelation (also called bicor) is a measure of similarity between samples. It is median-based, rather than mean-based, thus is less sensitive to outliers, and can be a robust alternative to other similarity metrics, such as Pearson correlation or mutual information.".
- Biweight_midcorrelation label "Biweight midcorrelation".
- Biweight_midcorrelation wasDerivedFrom Biweight_midcorrelation?oldid=679160119.
- Biweight_midcorrelation isPrimaryTopicOf Biweight_midcorrelation.