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Parametric family

In mathematics and its applications, a parametric family or a parameterized family is a family of objects (a set of related objects) whose differences depend only on the chosen values for a set of parameters. In mathematics and its applications, a parametric family or a parameterized family is a family of objects (a set of related objects) whose differences depend only on the chosen values for a set of parameters. Common examples are parametrized (families of) functions, probability distributions, curves, shapes, etc. For example, the probability density function f X {displaystyle f_{X}} of a random variable X may depend on a parameter θ {displaystyle heta } . In that case, the function may be denoted f X ( ⋅ ; θ ) {displaystyle f_{X}(cdot ,; heta )} to indicate the dependence on the parameter θ {displaystyle heta } . θ {displaystyle heta } is not a formal argument of the function as it is considered to be fixed. However, each different value of the parameter gives a different probability density function. Then the parametric family of densities is the set of functions { f X ( ⋅ ; θ ) ∣ θ ∈ Θ } {displaystyle {f_{X}(cdot ,; heta )mid heta in Theta }} , where Θ {displaystyle Theta } denotes the parameter space, the set of all possible values that the parameter θ {displaystyle heta } can take. As an example, the normal distribution is a family of similarly-shaped distributions parametrized by their mean and their variance. In decision theory, two-moment decision models can be applied when the decision-maker is faced with random variables drawn from a location-scale family of probability distributions. In economics, the Cobb–Douglas production function is a family of production functions parametrized by the elasticities of output with respect to the various factors of production. In algebra, the quadratic equation, for example, is actually a family of equations parametrized by the coefficients of the variable and of its square and by the constant term.

[ "Applied mathematics", "Statistics", "Mathematical optimization", "Econometrics" ]
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