Skip to main content
Graph
Search
fr
en
Login
Search
All
Categories
Concepts
Courses
Lectures
MOOCs
People
Practice
Publications
Startups
Units
Show all results for
Home
Lecture
Copulas and Margins: Extremal Dependence in Statistics
Graph Chatbot
Related lectures (31)
Previous
Page 2 of 4
Next
Sampling Theory: Statistics for Mathematicians
Covers the theory of sampling, focusing on statistics for mathematicians.
Multivariate Statistics: Conditional Distributions
Covers conditional distributions and correlations in multivariate statistics, including partial variance and covariance, with applications to non-normal distributions.
Introduction to Continuous Random Variables: Probability Distributions
Introduces continuous random variables and their probability distributions, emphasizing their applications in statistics and data science.
Random Vectors & Distribution Functions
Covers random vectors, joint distribution, conditional density functions, independence, covariance, correlation, and conditional expectation.
Probability Distributions: Central Limit Theorem and Applications
Discusses probability distributions and the Central Limit Theorem, emphasizing their importance in data science and statistical analysis.
Elliptical Distributions: Properties and Applications
Covers elliptical distributions, including properties, applications, and risk management implications.
Probability and Statistics: Fundamental Theorems
Explores fundamental theorems in probability and statistics, joint probability laws, and marginal distributions.
Copulas and Extreme Values
Explores copulas for measuring dependence strength in distributions and transforming variables to unit Fréchet margins.
Central Limit Theorem: Properties and Applications
Explores the Central Limit Theorem, covariance, correlation, joint random variables, quantiles, and the law of large numbers.
Describing Data: Statistics and Hypothesis Testing
Covers descriptive statistics, hypothesis testing, and correlation analysis with various probability distributions and robust statistics.