General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCan people please stop calling a Poisson distribution a "bell curve"?
More to the point, can everyone please stop sharing articles that refer to the curve in the graph as a "bell curve"? It's not a bell curve. It's not Gaussian. A time series can't be Gaussian. It's a Poisson distribution and is completely different.
lapfog_1
(29,218 posts)unfortunately your plea will fall on deaf ears...
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)JustABozoOnThisBus
(23,362 posts)DFW
(54,426 posts)J'allais dire la même chose!
JustABozoOnThisBus
(23,362 posts)la forme de la poêle
DFW
(54,426 posts)évidamment.......
canetoad
(17,175 posts)Every second thread I open is 'Poisson' this or 'Bell Curve' that. It's stressful.
hlthe2b
(102,328 posts)with MECHANICAL VENTILATORS. And it is Dr. Birx, not Brix! And RT-PCR detects viral nucleic acid, NOT antibodies. And maybe some of the amateur epidemiologists can stop conflating CASE-FATALITY with MORTALITY RATES.
I've got a lot of them building up, but...deep breathing...
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)boston bean
(36,223 posts)PCIntern
(25,572 posts)The distinctions become important. If youre gonna write/expound on it you may as well get it right.
boston bean
(36,223 posts)PCIntern
(25,572 posts)No wonder nobody gets anything right. Nothing matters.
Id like to go into your workplace and use misnomers for everything all day. Im sure youd be pleased...
boston bean
(36,223 posts)Codeine
(25,586 posts)As long as we know what tooth were talking about who cares what we call it?
😁😁😁😁 or 😷😷😷😷
PJMcK
(22,040 posts)Words don't mean much of anything anymore. Trump and the Republicans have turned language upside down in Orwellian ways.
But it's not just in politics. Recently, there was an article in Vox about the Chinese lunar rover that is exploring the side of the Moon that faces away from the Earth. (I suspect you know that the Moon is tidally locked to the Earth and the same side always faces us.)
The author referred to that side as "the dark side of the Moon." When I pointed out to him that the Moon rotates and all of it gets sunshine so he should have called it "the far side of the Moon," he excused himself by saying it was a colloquial expression. When I responded that he was writing a SCIENCE column, he responded, so what? Even NASA refers to the far side in colloquial terms.
Words lose their meanings when they are constantly misused.
Here's one that pisses me off: The misuse of "skim" and "scan." Too often, people will say, "I didn't read the whole thing. I scanned it." Those two statements are mutually exclusive. To skim means to skip over the top, like skimming the cream off the top of un-homogenized milk. To scan means to peruse in great detail, like the computer device known as a scanner.
It drives me crazy because it shows that people don't know what words mean. Or it means that words have no meanings. If that's true, then how do we communicate?
Codeine
(25,586 posts)they dont likely understand it.
boston bean
(36,223 posts)It doesnt mean a damn thing to harp on proper word for the curve.
People who study curves have at it.
yardwork
(61,690 posts)boston bean
(36,223 posts)Sort of like when gun bumpers harp on people for not knowing the difference between a magazine and a clip.
yardwork
(61,690 posts)This is quite different from using a different word for a part of a gun.
These words mean different things. A Poisson distribution is different from a bell curve distribution.
Misstating scientific facts misleads people, like saying a set of things add up to ten when they actually add up to one hundred.
boston bean
(36,223 posts)This is the absolute least of our worries. Correcting people on the proper verbiage, is a waste of time and effort.
People know what it means to flatten the curve nor matter if they add bell before the word curve in error.
gibraltar72
(7,508 posts)Laelth
(32,017 posts)What's the difference between a bell curve and a poisson distribution?
Looks like a bell curve to me, and the point of social distancing is to flatten that curve so that health care delivery systems are not overwhelmed.
-Laelth
Recursion
(56,582 posts)A Poisson distribution has a beginning point in time. Also they're just different curves; it's like the difference in a triangle and an octagon -- they're just different things.
RobinA
(9,894 posts)I thought this the first time I saw it but went, that's not a bell curve, but OK. I didn't know anything about a Poisson distribution, now I can learn something!
DFW
(54,426 posts)[URL=.html][IMG][/IMG][/URL]
C'est compris maintenant?
Codeine
(25,586 posts)DFW
(54,426 posts)And less in Marseille..........
Happy Hoosier
(7,366 posts)I share you chagrin!
Yavin4
(35,445 posts)The Poisson distrubution:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson_distribution
Ms. Toad
(34,085 posts)I can't say I've seen any labeling the curve.
Tipperary
(6,930 posts)Strange that.
rzemanfl
(29,566 posts)Let's see if I remember it....
GemDigger
(4,305 posts)Don't let it get your BP up, it isn't worth it.
USALiberal
(10,877 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(175,747 posts)I never distribute dinner plates of fish. Vile stuff, IMO.