Key Concepts
- A Poisson distribution is a discrete random variable.
- Calculating a Poisson probability is based on the average number of occurrences for a specific interval of time.
- For a Poisson distribution, the chances of the event happening are independent of when the event previously happened.
Glossary
Poisson probability distribution: a discrete random variable (RV)(RV) that counts the number of times a certain event will occur in a specific interval; characteristics of the variable:
- The probability that the event occurs in a given interval is the same for all intervals.
- The events occur with a known mean and independently of the time since the last event.
The distribution is defined by the mean μμ of the event in the interval. Notation: X∼P(μ)X∼P(μ).
This mean is μ=npμ=np. The. standard deviation is σ=√μσ=√μ. The probability of having exactly xx successes. in rr trials is P(X=x)=e−μ(μxx!)P(X=x)=e−μ(μxx!). The Poisson distribution is often used to approximate the binomial distribution, when nn is “large” and pp is “small” (a general rule is that nn should be greater than or equal to 20 and pp should be less than or equal to 0.05).
Candela Citations
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- Introductory Statistics. Authored by: Barbara Illowsky, Susan Dean. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: https://openstax.org/books/introductory-statistics/pages/4-key-terms. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/introductory-statistics/pages/1-introduction