When absolutely sure, it is difficult to rise above oneself. edit

Variation in random samples edit

 
Variations of nine return period curves of 50-year samples from a theoretical 1000 year record (base line), data from Benson [1]

Reference edit

  1. ^ Benson, M.A. 1960. Characteristics of frequency curves based on a theoretical 1000 year record. In: T.Dalrymple (Ed.), Flood frequency analysis. U.S. Geological Survey Water Supply Paper, 1543-A, pp. 51-71.

Binomial confidence belts edit


Probability paper edit

Inversion of skewness edit

 
(A) Gumbel probability distribution skew to right and (B) Gumbel mirrored skew to left

Skewed distributions can be inverted (or mirrored) by replacing in the mathematical expression of the cumulative distribution function (F) by its complement: F'=1-F, obtaining the complementary distribution function (also called survival function) that gives a mirror image. In this manner, a distribution that is skewed to the right is transformed into a distribution that is skewed to the left and vice versa.

Example. The F-expression of the positively skewed Gumbel distribution is: F=exp[-exp{-(X-u)/0.78s}], where u is the mode (i.e. the value occurring most frequently) and s is the standard deviation. The Gumbel distribution can be transformed using F'=1-exp[-exp{-(x-u)/0.78s}] . This transformation yields the inverse, mirrored, or complementary Gumbel distribution that may fit a data series obeying a negatively skewed distribution.