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Edições completas: Mecânica estatística • Modelo Hodgkin-Huxley • Neurociência computacional • Modelo probabilístico para redes neurais • Teoria de campo médio • Modelo FitzHugh–Nagumo • Processo Lévy • Cadeias de Markov • Processo de Poisson • Galves–Löcherbach model • Stochastic chains with memory of variable length • Lesão do plexo braquial • Somatotopia • Função densidade • Modelos de grafos aleatórios exponenciais • Processo de Gram-Schmidt • Equação de Chapman–Kolmogorov • Predefinição:Processos estocásticos • Algoritmo de autovalores • Transição de fase • Hipótese do cérebro crítico • Critical brain hypothesis • Passeio aleatório • Plasticidade sináptica • Potencial pós-sináptico excitatório • Potencial pós-sináptico inibitório • Modelo de Morris-Lecar • Plexo braquial • Processo gaussiano • Campo aleatório de Markov • Eletroencefalografia • Modelo de Hindmarsh-Rose • Sistemas de partícula em interação • Medida de Gibbs • Nervo escapular dorsal • Nervo radial • Nervo peitoral lateral • Nervo musculocutâneo • Medida de Dirac • Nervo torácico longo • Sigma-álgebra • Nervo peitoral medial • Nervo ulnar • Potencial evocado • Estimulação magnética transcraniana repetitiva • Teorema de Donsker • Desigualdade de Boole • Codificação neural • Aprendizado de máquina • Independência condicional • Inferência estatística • Nervo subclávio • Nervo supraescapular • Nervo mediano • Nervo axilar • Movimento browniano geométrico • Caminho autoevitante • Tempo local • Nervo subescapular superior • Nervo toracodorsal • Nervo subscapular inferior • Caminho (teoria dos grafos) • Campo aleatório • Lei do logaritmo iterado
Edições em andamento: Nervo cutâneo medial do braço (N) • Nervo cutâneo medial do antebraço (N) • Cérebro estatístico (N) • Statistician brain • Distribuição de probabilidade condicional (N) • Esperança condicional (N) • Integral de Itō (N) • Martingale • Variação quadrática (N) • Processo Ornstein–Uhlenbeck • Ruído branco • Teoria ergódica • Avalanche neuronal (N) • Teoria da percolação (N) • Função totiente de Euler • Ruído neuronal (N) • Distribuição de Poisson • Córtex cerebral • Estímulo (fisiologia)
In probability theory and statistics, given two jointly distributed random variables X and Y, the conditional probability distribution of Y given X is the probability distribution of Y when X is known to be a particular value; in some cases the conditional probabilities may be expressed as functions containing the unspecified value x of X as a parameter. In case that both "X" and "Y" are categorical variables, a conditional probability table is typically used to represent the conditional probability. The conditional distribution contrasts with the marginal distribution of a random variable, which is its distribution without reference to the value of the other variable.
If the conditional distribution of Y given X is a continuous distribution, then its probability density function is known as the conditional density function. The properties of a conditional distribution, such as the moments, are often referred to by corresponding names such as the conditional mean and conditional variance.
More generally, one can refer to the conditional distribution of a subset of a set of more than two variables; this conditional distribution is contingent on the values of all the remaining variables, and if more than one variable is included in the subset then this conditional distribution is the conditional joint distribution of the included variables.
Discrete distributions
editarFor discrete random variables, the conditional probability mass function of Y given the occurrence of the value x of X can be written according to its definition as:
Due to the occurrence of in a denominator, this is defined only for non-zero (hence strictly positive)
The relation with the probability distribution of X given Y is:
Continuous distributions
editarSimilarly for continuous random variables, the conditional probability density function of Y given the occurrence of the value x of X can be written as
where fX,Y(x, y) gives the joint density of X and Y, while fX(x) gives the marginal density for X. Also in this case it is necessary that .
The relation with the probability distribution of X given Y is given by:
The concept of the conditional distribution of a continuous random variable is not as intuitive as it might seem: Borel's paradox shows that conditional probability density functions need not be invariant under coordinate transformations.
Relation to independence
editarRandom variables X, Y are independent if and only if the conditional distribution of Y given X is, for all possible realizations of X, equal to the unconditional distribution of Y. For discrete random variables this means P(Y = y | X = x) = P(Y = y) for all relevant x and y. For continuous random variables X and Y, having a joint density function, it means fY(y | X = x) = fY(y) for all relevant x and y.
Properties
editarSeen as a function of y for given x, P(Y = y | X = x) is a probability and so the sum over all y (or integral if it is a conditional probability density) is 1. Seen as a function of x for given y, it is a likelihood function, so that the sum over all x need not be 1.
Measure-theoretic formulation
editarLet be a probability space, a -field in , and a real-valued random variable (measurable with respect to the Borel -field on ). It can be shown that there exists[1] a function such that is a probability measure on for each (i.e., it is regular) and (almost surely) for every . For any , the function is called a conditional probability distribution of given . In this case,
almost surely.
Relation to conditional expectation
editarFor any event , define the indicator function:
which is a random variable. Note that the expectation of this random variable is equal to the probability of A itself:
Then the conditional probability given is a function such that is the conditional expectation of the indicator function for A:
In other words, is a -measurable function satisfying
A conditional probability is regular if is also a probability measure for all ω ∈ Ω. An expectation of a random variable with respect to a regular conditional probability is equal to its conditional expectation.
- For the trivial sigma algebra the conditional probability is a constant function,
- For , as outlined above, .
See also
editarNotes
editar- ↑ Billingsley (1995), p. 439
References
editar- Billingsley, Patrick (1995). Probability and Measure 3rd ed. New York: John Wiley and Sons