Jump to content

Singular distribution

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In probability, a singular distribution is a probability distribution concentrated on a set of Lebesgue measure zero, where the probability of each point in that set is zero.[1]

Other names

[edit]

These distributions are sometimes called singular continuous distributions, since their cumulative distribution functions are singular and continuous.[1]

Properties

[edit]

Such distributions are not absolutely continuous with respect to Lebesgue measure.

A singular distribution is not a discrete probability distribution because each discrete point has a zero probability. On the other hand, neither does it have a probability density function, since the Lebesgue integral of any such function would be zero.

In general, distributions can be described as a discrete distribution (with a probability mass function), an absolutely continuous distribution (with a probability density), a singular distribution (with neither), or can be decomposed into a mixture of these.[1]

Example

[edit]

An example is the Cantor distribution; its cumulative distribution function is a devil's staircase. Less curious examples appear in higher dimensions. For example, the upper and lower Fréchet–Hoeffding bounds are singular distributions in two dimensions.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Singular distribution - Encyclopedia of Mathematics". encyclopediaofmath.org. Retrieved 2024-08-23.
[edit]