Difference between revisions of "Beta-distribution"
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− | + | A continuous probability distribution concentrated on $ (0, 1) $ | |
+ | with density | ||
− | + | $$ \tag{1 } | |
+ | \beta _ {m, n } (x) = \ | ||
− | + | \frac{1}{B (m, n) } | |
− | + | x ^ {m - 1 } | |
+ | (1 - x) ^ {n - 1 } , | ||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | |||
+ | where the parameters $ m, n $ | ||
+ | are non-negative and the normalizing factor $ B(m, n) $ | ||
+ | is Euler's beta-function | ||
+ | |||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | B (m, n) = \ | ||
+ | \int\limits _ { 0 } ^ { 1 } | ||
+ | x ^ {m - 1 } | ||
+ | (1 - x) ^ {n - 1 } \ | ||
+ | dx = | ||
+ | \frac{\Gamma (m) \Gamma (n) }{\Gamma (m + n) } | ||
+ | , | ||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | |||
+ | where $ \Gamma (n) $ | ||
+ | is the [[Gamma-function|gamma-function]]. The distribution function is expressed as the incomplete beta-function | ||
+ | |||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | B _ {m, n } (x) = \ | ||
+ | |||
+ | \frac{1}{B (m, n) } | ||
+ | |||
+ | \int\limits _ { 0 } ^ { x } | ||
+ | y ^ {m - 1 } | ||
+ | (1 - y) ^ {n - 1 } dy,\ \ | ||
+ | 0 < x < 1 | ||
+ | $$ | ||
(this function has been tabulated, see [[#References|[1]]], [[#References|[2]]]). The moments of the beta-distribution are given by the formulas | (this function has been tabulated, see [[#References|[1]]], [[#References|[2]]]). The moments of the beta-distribution are given by the formulas | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | m _ {k} = \ | ||
+ | |||
+ | \frac{B (m + k, n) }{B (m, n) } | ||
+ | ,\ \ | ||
+ | k = 1, 2 , . . . . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | |||
+ | In particular, the mathematical expectation and the variance are $ m/(m + n) $ | ||
+ | and $ mn/ \{ (m + n) ^ {2} (m + n + 1) \} $, | ||
+ | respectively. If $ m > 1 $ | ||
+ | and $ n > 1 $, | ||
+ | the density curve $ \beta _ {m,n} (x) $ | ||
+ | has a single mode at the point $ x = (m - 1)/(m + n - 2) $ | ||
+ | and vanishes at the ends of the interval. If either $ m < 1 $ | ||
+ | or $ n < 1 $, | ||
+ | one ordinate at the end of the graph becomes infinite, and if both $ m < 1 $ | ||
+ | and $ n < 1 $, | ||
+ | both ordinates at the ends of the interval are infinite and the curve is U-shaped. If $ m = 1 $ | ||
+ | and $ n = 1 $ | ||
+ | the beta-distribution reduces to the [[Uniform distribution|uniform distribution]] on the interval $ (0, 1) $. | ||
+ | Another special case of the beta-distribution is the so-called [[Arcsine distribution|arcsine distribution]]: | ||
+ | |||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | \beta _ {1/2, 1/2 } (x) = \ | ||
+ | |||
+ | \frac{1}{\pi \sqrt {x (1 - x) } } | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | |||
+ | If one substitutes $ x = 1/(1 + t) $ | ||
+ | in (1), then one obtains a distribution having the density | ||
+ | |||
+ | $$ \tag{2 } | ||
+ | \beta _ {m,n} ^ \prime (t) = \ | ||
− | + | \frac{1}{B (m, n) } | |
+ | \cdot | ||
− | + | \frac{t ^ {m - 1 } }{(1 + t) ^ {m + n - 2 } } | |
+ | ,\ \ | ||
+ | 0 < t < \infty . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
− | + | This distribution is called a beta-distribution of the second kind, as distinct from the beta-distribution (1). The distributions (1) and (2) correspond to "type I" and "type VI" distributions in the system of [[Pearson curves|Pearson curves]]. An important case of generation of a beta-distribution is the following: If $ X _ {1} $ | |
+ | and $ X _ {2} $ | ||
+ | are independent and have gamma-distributions (cf. [[Gamma-distribution|Gamma-distribution]]) with respective parameters $ m $ | ||
+ | and $ n $, | ||
+ | then the random variable $ X _ {1} / (X _ {1} + X _ {2} ) $ | ||
+ | will have a beta-distribution with density $ \beta _ {m,n} (x) $. | ||
+ | This fact to a large extent explains the role played by beta-distributions in various applications, in particular in mathematical statistics: The distributions of several important statistics are reducible to beta-distributions. For instance, the distribution function of the $ F $- | ||
+ | relationship | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | F _ {m, n } = \ | ||
− | + | \frac{n \chi _ {m} ^ {2} }{m \chi _ {n} ^ {2} } | |
− | + | $$ | |
− | (the random variable | + | (the random variable $ \chi _ {k} ^ {2} $ |
+ | has a $ \chi ^ {2} $- | ||
+ | distribution with $ k $ | ||
+ | degrees of freedom) is expressed by the formula | ||
− | < | + | $$ |
+ | {\mathsf P} (F _ {m, n } < x) = \ | ||
+ | B _ {m/2, n/2 } | ||
+ | \left ( | ||
+ | \frac{mx}{n + mx } | ||
+ | \right ) | ||
+ | $$ | ||
− | (the values of the | + | (the values of the $ F $- |
+ | distribution are usually calculated with the aid of tables of beta-functions). The beta-distribution function also allows one to compute the values of the [[Binomial distribution|binomial distribution]] functions, in view of the relationship | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | B _ {n - m, m + 1 } | ||
+ | (1 - p) = \ | ||
+ | \sum _ {k = 0 } ^ { m } | ||
+ | \left ( | ||
+ | \begin{array}{c} | ||
+ | n \\ | ||
+ | k | ||
+ | \end{array} | ||
+ | \ | ||
+ | \right ) | ||
+ | p ^ {k} | ||
+ | (1 - p) ^ {n - k } . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
Beta-distributions are used in fields other than mathematical statistics; thus, the density of the beta-distribution is the weight function for the system of orthogonal [[Jacobi polynomials|Jacobi polynomials]]. | Beta-distributions are used in fields other than mathematical statistics; thus, the density of the beta-distribution is the weight function for the system of orthogonal [[Jacobi polynomials|Jacobi polynomials]]. |
Revision as of 10:58, 29 May 2020
A continuous probability distribution concentrated on $ (0, 1) $
with density
$$ \tag{1 } \beta _ {m, n } (x) = \ \frac{1}{B (m, n) } x ^ {m - 1 } (1 - x) ^ {n - 1 } , $$
where the parameters $ m, n $ are non-negative and the normalizing factor $ B(m, n) $ is Euler's beta-function
$$ B (m, n) = \ \int\limits _ { 0 } ^ { 1 } x ^ {m - 1 } (1 - x) ^ {n - 1 } \ dx = \frac{\Gamma (m) \Gamma (n) }{\Gamma (m + n) } , $$
where $ \Gamma (n) $ is the gamma-function. The distribution function is expressed as the incomplete beta-function
$$ B _ {m, n } (x) = \ \frac{1}{B (m, n) } \int\limits _ { 0 } ^ { x } y ^ {m - 1 } (1 - y) ^ {n - 1 } dy,\ \ 0 < x < 1 $$
(this function has been tabulated, see [1], [2]). The moments of the beta-distribution are given by the formulas
$$ m _ {k} = \ \frac{B (m + k, n) }{B (m, n) } ,\ \ k = 1, 2 , . . . . $$
In particular, the mathematical expectation and the variance are $ m/(m + n) $ and $ mn/ \{ (m + n) ^ {2} (m + n + 1) \} $, respectively. If $ m > 1 $ and $ n > 1 $, the density curve $ \beta _ {m,n} (x) $ has a single mode at the point $ x = (m - 1)/(m + n - 2) $ and vanishes at the ends of the interval. If either $ m < 1 $ or $ n < 1 $, one ordinate at the end of the graph becomes infinite, and if both $ m < 1 $ and $ n < 1 $, both ordinates at the ends of the interval are infinite and the curve is U-shaped. If $ m = 1 $ and $ n = 1 $ the beta-distribution reduces to the uniform distribution on the interval $ (0, 1) $. Another special case of the beta-distribution is the so-called arcsine distribution:
$$ \beta _ {1/2, 1/2 } (x) = \ \frac{1}{\pi \sqrt {x (1 - x) } } . $$
If one substitutes $ x = 1/(1 + t) $ in (1), then one obtains a distribution having the density
$$ \tag{2 } \beta _ {m,n} ^ \prime (t) = \ \frac{1}{B (m, n) } \cdot \frac{t ^ {m - 1 } }{(1 + t) ^ {m + n - 2 } } ,\ \ 0 < t < \infty . $$
This distribution is called a beta-distribution of the second kind, as distinct from the beta-distribution (1). The distributions (1) and (2) correspond to "type I" and "type VI" distributions in the system of Pearson curves. An important case of generation of a beta-distribution is the following: If $ X _ {1} $ and $ X _ {2} $ are independent and have gamma-distributions (cf. Gamma-distribution) with respective parameters $ m $ and $ n $, then the random variable $ X _ {1} / (X _ {1} + X _ {2} ) $ will have a beta-distribution with density $ \beta _ {m,n} (x) $. This fact to a large extent explains the role played by beta-distributions in various applications, in particular in mathematical statistics: The distributions of several important statistics are reducible to beta-distributions. For instance, the distribution function of the $ F $- relationship
$$ F _ {m, n } = \ \frac{n \chi _ {m} ^ {2} }{m \chi _ {n} ^ {2} } $$
(the random variable $ \chi _ {k} ^ {2} $ has a $ \chi ^ {2} $- distribution with $ k $ degrees of freedom) is expressed by the formula
$$ {\mathsf P} (F _ {m, n } < x) = \ B _ {m/2, n/2 } \left ( \frac{mx}{n + mx } \right ) $$
(the values of the $ F $- distribution are usually calculated with the aid of tables of beta-functions). The beta-distribution function also allows one to compute the values of the binomial distribution functions, in view of the relationship
$$ B _ {n - m, m + 1 } (1 - p) = \ \sum _ {k = 0 } ^ { m } \left ( \begin{array}{c} n \\ k \end{array} \ \right ) p ^ {k} (1 - p) ^ {n - k } . $$
Beta-distributions are used in fields other than mathematical statistics; thus, the density of the beta-distribution is the weight function for the system of orthogonal Jacobi polynomials.
References
[1] | L.N. Bol'shev, N.V. Smirnov, "Tables of mathematical statistics" , Libr. math. tables , 46 , Nauka (1983) (In Russian) (Processed by L.S. Bark and E.S. Kedrova) |
[2] | K. Pearson, "Tables of the incomplete beta-function" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1932) |
Beta-distribution. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Beta-distribution&oldid=16107