Difference between revisions of "AP Statistics Curriculum 2007 Gamma"
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*k is the number of occurrences of an event | *k is the number of occurrences of an event | ||
*if k is a positive integer, then <math>\Gamma(k)=(k-1)!</math> is the gamma function | *if k is a positive integer, then <math>\Gamma(k)=(k-1)!</math> is the gamma function | ||
− | *<math>\theta=1/\lambda</math> is the mean number of events per time unit, where <math>\lambda</math> is the mean time between events. For example, if the mean time between phone calls is 2 hours, then you would use a gamma distribution with <math>\theta</math>=1/2=0.5. If we want to find the mean number of calls in 5 hours, it would be 5<math>\times</math>1/2=2.5. | + | *<math>\theta=1/\lambda</math> is the mean number of events per time unit, where <math>\lambda</math> is the mean time between events. For example, if the mean time between phone calls is 2 hours, then you would use a gamma distribution with <math>\theta</math>=1/2=0.5. If we want to find the mean number of calls in 5 hours, it would be 5 <math>\times</math> 1/2=2.5. |
*x is a random variable | *x is a random variable | ||
Revision as of 15:35, 11 July 2011
Gamma Distribution
Definition: Gamma distribution is a distribution that arises naturally in processes for which the waiting times between events are relevant. It can be thought of as a waiting time between Poisson distributed events.
Probability density function: The waiting time until the hth Poisson event with a rate of change \(\lambda\) is
\[P(x)=\frac{\lambda(\lambda x)^{h-1}}{(h-1)!}{e^{-\lambda x}}\]
For X~Gamma(k,\(\theta\)), where \(k=h\) and \(\theta=1/\lambda\), the gamma probability density function is given by
\[\frac{x^{k-1}e^{-x/\theta}}{\Gamma(k)\theta^k}\]
where
- e is the natural number (e = 2.71828…)
- k is the number of occurrences of an event
- if k is a positive integer, then \(\Gamma(k)=(k-1)!\) is the gamma function
- \(\theta=1/\lambda\) is the mean number of events per time unit, where \(\lambda\) is the mean time between events. For example, if the mean time between phone calls is 2 hours, then you would use a gamma distribution with \(\theta\)=1/2=0.5. If we want to find the mean number of calls in 5 hours, it would be 5 \(\times\) 1/2=2.5.
- x is a random variable
Cumulative density function: The gamma cumulative distribution function is given by
\[\frac{\gamma(k,x/\theta)}{\Gamma(k)}\]
where
- if k is a positive integer, then \(\Gamma(k)=(k-1)!\) is the gamma function
- \(\gamma(k,x/\theta)=\int_0^{x/\theta}t^{k-1}e^{-t}dt\)
Moment generating function: The gamma moment-generating function is
\[M(t)=(1-\theta t)^{-k}\!\]
Expectation: The expected value of a gamma distributed random variable x is
\[E(X)=k\theta\!\]
Variance: The gamma variance is
\[Var(X)=k\theta^2\!\]
Applications
The gamma distribution can be used a range of disciplines including queuing models, climatology, and financial services. Examples of events that may be modeled by gamma distribution include:
- The amount of rainfall accumulated in a reservoir
- The size of loan defaults or aggregate insurance claims
- The flow of items through manufacturing and distribution processes
- The load on web servers
- The many and varied forms of telecom exchange
The gamma distribution is also used to model errors in a multi-level Poisson regression model because the combination of a Poisson distribution and a gamma distribution is a negative binomial distribution.
Example
Suppose you are fishing and you expect to get a fish once every 1/2 hour. Compute the probability that you will have to wait between 2 to 4 hours before you catch 4 fish.
One fish every 1/2 hour means we would expect to get \(\theta=1/0.5=2\) fish every hour on average. Using \(\theta=2\) and \(k=4\), we can compute this as follows:
\[P(2\le X\le 4)=\sum_{x=2}^4\frac{x^{4-1}e^{-x/2}}{\Gamma(4)2^4}=0.12388\]
The figure below shows this result using SOCR distributions