June 2020
Intermediate to advanced
364 pages
13h 56m
English
So far, we have dealt with and learned about distributions that relate to one random variable; but now, say we have two random variables, X and Y. Then, their joint distribution is defined as
, such that
.
In joint distributions, we usually tend to know the distribution of a set of variables, but sometimes, we may only want to know the distribution of a subset. We call this the marginal distribution. We define the marginal distribution of X as follows:
Let's say our n continuous random variables in A are jointly distributed ...