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  2. Linear trend estimation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_trend_estimation

    Linear trend estimation is a statistical technique used to analyze data patterns. Data patterns, or trends, occur when the information gathered, tends to increase or decrease over time, or is influenced by changes in an external factor. Linear trend estimation essentially creates a straight line on a graph of data that models the general ...

  3. Best linear unbiased prediction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_linear_unbiased...

    In statistics, best linear unbiased prediction ( BLUP) is used in linear mixed models for the estimation of random effects. BLUP was derived by Charles Roy Henderson in 1950 but the term "best linear unbiased predictor" (or "prediction") seems not to have been used until 1962. [ 1] ". Best linear unbiased predictions" (BLUPs) of random effects ...

  4. Software development effort estimation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_development...

    Software development effort estimation. In software development, effort estimation is the process of predicting the most realistic amount of effort (expressed in terms of person-hours or money) required to develop or maintain software based on incomplete, uncertain and noisy input.

  5. Trend-stationary process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trend-stationary_process

    Trend-stationary process. In the statistical analysis of time series, a trend-stationary process is a stochastic process from which an underlying trend (function solely of time) can be removed, leaving a stationary process. [1] The trend does not have to be linear.

  6. Cochran–Armitage test for trend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochran–Armitage_test_for...

    The Cochran–Armitage test for trend, [1] [2] named for William Cochran and Peter Armitage, is used in categorical data analysis when the aim is to assess for the presence of an association between a variable with two categories and an ordinal variable with k categories. It modifies the Pearson chi-squared test to incorporate a suspected ...

  7. Local regression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_regression

    Local regression or local polynomial regression, [ 1] also known as moving regression, [ 2] is a generalization of the moving average and polynomial regression. [ 3] Its most common methods, initially developed for scatterplot smoothing, are LOESS ( locally estimated scatterplot smoothing) and LOWESS ( locally weighted scatterplot smoothing ...

  8. Linear regression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_regression

    e. In statistics, linear regression is a statistical model which estimates the linear relationship between a scalar response and one or more explanatory variables (also known as dependent and independent variables ). The case of one explanatory variable is called simple linear regression; for more than one, the process is called multiple linear ...

  9. Calibration (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calibration_(statistics)

    Calibration can mean. a reverse process to regression, where instead of a future dependent variable being predicted from known explanatory variables, a known observation of the dependent variables is used to predict a corresponding explanatory variable; [ 1] procedures in statistical classification to determine class membership probabilities ...