Hyperbolic distribution
Continuous probability distribution
hyperbolic Parameters
μ
{\displaystyle \mu }
location (real )
α
{\displaystyle \alpha }
(real)
β
{\displaystyle \beta }
asymmetry parameter (real)
δ
{\displaystyle \delta }
scale parameter (real)
γ
=
α
2
−
β
2
{\displaystyle \gamma ={\sqrt {\alpha ^{2}-\beta ^{2}
Support
x
∈
(
−
∞
;
+
∞
)
{\displaystyle x\in (-\infty ;+\infty )\!}
PDF
γ
2
α
δ
K
1
(
δ
γ
)
e
−
α
δ
2
+
(
x
−
μ
)
2
+
β
(
x
−
μ
)
{\displaystyle {\frac {\gamma }{2\alpha \delta K_{1}(\delta \gamma )}\;e^{-\alpha {\sqrt {\delta ^{2}+(x-\mu )^{2}+\beta (x-\mu )}
K
λ
{\displaystyle K_{\lambda }
denotes a modified Bessel function of the second kind Mean
μ
+
δ
β
K
2
(
δ
γ
)
γ
K
1
(
δ
γ
)
{\displaystyle \mu +{\frac {\delta \beta K_{2}(\delta \gamma )}{\gamma K_{1}(\delta \gamma )}
Mode
μ
+
δ
β
γ
{\displaystyle \mu +{\frac {\delta \beta }{\gamma }
Variance
δ
K
2
(
δ
γ
)
γ
K
1
(
δ
γ
)
+
β
2
δ
2
γ
2
(
K
3
(
δ
γ
)
K
1
(
δ
γ
)
−
K
2
2
(
δ
γ
)
K
1
2
(
δ
γ
)
)
{\displaystyle {\frac {\delta K_{2}(\delta \gamma )}{\gamma K_{1}(\delta \gamma )}+{\frac {\beta ^{2}\delta ^{2}{\gamma ^{2}\left({\frac {K_{3}(\delta \gamma )}{K_{1}(\delta \gamma )}-{\frac {K_{2}^{2}(\delta \gamma )}{K_{1}^{2}(\delta \gamma )}\right)}
MGF
e
μ
z
γ
K
1
(
δ
(
α
2
−
(
β
+
z
)
2
)
)
(
α
2
−
(
β
+
z
)
2
)
K
1
(
δ
γ
)
{\displaystyle {\frac {e^{\mu z}\gamma K_{1}(\delta {\sqrt {(\alpha ^{2}-(\beta +z)^{2})})}{\sqrt {(\alpha ^{2}-(\beta +z)^{2})}K_{1}(\delta \gamma )}
The hyperbolic distribution is a continuous probability distribution characterized by the logarithm of the probability density function being a hyperbola . Thus the distribution decreases exponentially, which is more slowly than the normal distribution . It is therefore suitable to model phenomena where numerically large values are more probable than is the case for the normal distribution. Examples are returns from financial assets and turbulent wind speeds. The hyperbolic distributions form a subclass of the generalised hyperbolic distributions .
The origin of the distribution is the observation by Ralph Bagnold , published in his book The Physics of Blown Sand and Desert Dunes (1941), that the logarithm of the histogram of the empirical size distribution of sand deposits tends to form a hyperbola. This observation was formalised mathematically by Ole Barndorff-Nielsen in a paper in 1977,[ 1] where he also introduced the generalised hyperbolic distribution , using the fact the a hyperbolic distribution is a random mixture of normal distributions.
References
^ Barndorff-Nielsen, Ole (1977). "Exponentially decreasing distributions for the logarithm of particle size". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences . 353 (1674). The Royal Society: 401– 409. doi :10.1098/rspa.1977.0041 . JSTOR 79167 .
Discrete univariate
with finite support with infinite support
Continuous univariate
supported on a bounded interval supported on a semi-infinite interval supported on the whole real line with support whose type varies
Mixed univariate
Multivariate (joint) Directional Degenerate and singular Families
The article is a derivative under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License .
A link to the original article can be found here and attribution parties here
By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use . Gpedia ® is a registered trademark of the Cyberajah Pty Ltd