Search

Search Funnelback University

Search powered by Funnelback
21 - 30 of 25,871 search results for Economics test where 11,869 match all words and 14,002 match some words.
  1. Fully-matching results

  2. Probability About these notes. Many people have written excellent ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/prob/prob-weber.pdf
    16 Sep 2019: Screening test.Simpson’s paradox. 6.1 Conditional probability. Suppose B is an event with P(B) > 0. ... However, the test yields a false positive rate of1% of the healthy persons tested.
  3. 8 Mar 2016: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 23. 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. ... 6516.2 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6616.3 Example: monopolist. 6616.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  4. 29 Nov 2014: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 23. 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. ... 6416.2 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6516.3 Example: monopolist. 6516.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  5. 22 May 2013: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 22. 6.4 Sequential Probability Ratio Test. ... 6615.4 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6615.5 Example: monopolist. 6715.6 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  6. Optimization and Control

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/oc/index2014.html
    9 Oct 2014: 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 6.4 Sequential Probability Ratio Test. ... 15.8 Neoclassical economic growth. 16 Controlled Diffusion Processes. 16.1 The dynamic programming equation.
  7. Optimization and Control

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/oc/index2013.html
    15 Sep 2014: 6.4 Sequential Probability Ratio Test. 6.5 Bandit processes. 7 Bandit Processes and the Gittins Index. ... 15.7 Neoclassical economic growth. 16 Controlled Diffusion Processes. 16.1 The dynamic programming equation.
  8. Optimization and Control

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/oc/index.html
    14 Jan 2016: 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. 6.5 Example: prospecting. 7 Bandit Processes and the Gittins Index. ... 16.3 Example: monopolist. 16.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth. 16.5 Diffusion processes.
  9. 15 Mar 2016: Also, λ. (b) 0. In light of Theorem 2.5, Lagrange multipliers are also known as shadow prices, dueto an economic interpretation of the problem to. ... to φ(b)/bi. In this context, complementaryslackness corresponds to the basic economic principle that
  10. Markov Chains Course Blog

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/markov/blog.html
    4 Sep 2012: statistics, economics and finance, social sciences, mathematical biology, games, music, baseball and text generation. ... can test your intuition and make good guesses about what might or might not be true.
  11. 29 Nov 2018: Shape-constrained proce-dures are also commonly used in economics (Matzkin,1991, Varian, 1984) and survival analysis, for instancein the interval-censoring problem and hazard func-tion estimation; see the recent ... In the first part of the paper, applica

Search history

Recently clicked results

Recently clicked results

Your click history is empty.

Recent searches

Recent searches

Your search history is empty.