In mathematics, a measure is said to be saturated if every locally measurable set is also measurable. A set , not necessarily measurable, is said to be a locally measurable set if for every measurable set of finite measure, is measurable. -finite measures and measures arising as the restriction of outer measures are saturated. (Wikipedia).
Percentiles, Deciles, Quartiles
Understanding percentiles, quartiles, and deciles through definitions and examples
From playlist Unit 1: Descriptive Statistics
The Normal Distribution (1 of 3: Introductory definition)
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From playlist The Normal Distribution
Find Percentile with Mean and Standard Deviation (Normal Curves) | Statistics
We go over how to find percentiles with mean and standard deviation for a normal distribution, using a calculator (similar to TI-83) and a standard normal table. We discuss two problems, one where we are given a value and asked to calculate its percentile, and another where we are given a
From playlist Statistics
Determining values of a variable at a particular percentile in a normal distribution
From playlist Unit 2: Normal Distributions
Statistics 4 Measures of Dispersion.mov
Discussing range, variance, and standard deviation as measures of dispersion.
From playlist Medical Statistics
Identify the Level of Measurement MyMathlab Statistics Homework
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From playlist Statistics
This video provides a basic introduction to volume.
From playlist Volume and Surface Area (Geometry)
More Standard Deviation and Variance
Further explanations and examples of standard deviation and variance
From playlist Unit 1: Descriptive Statistics
A tale of two dynamos: turbulent large-scale and small-scale dynamos by Pallavi Bhat
Abstract: Coherent magnetic fields are ubiquitous in the universe as in the Sun, stars, galaxies and galaxy clusters. The theory of turbulent dynamos is the leading paradigm to understand the origin of these magnetic fields. A particularly generic process in turbulent astrophysical system
From playlist ICTS Colloquia
(October 16, 2009) Stephen Palmer, UC Berkeley Psychology, discusses his research on how humans think about, associate and react to color to demonstrate that it is possible to study the science of aesthetics. Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford Engineering Everywh
From playlist Lecture Collection | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2009-2010)
Absolute notions in model theory - M. Dzamonja - Workshop 1 - CEB T1 2018
Mirna Dzamonja (East Anglia) / 30.01.2018 The wonderful theory of stability and ranks developed for many notions in first order model theory implies that many model theoretic constructions are absolute, since they can be expressed in terms of internal properties measurable by the existenc
From playlist 2018 - T1 - Model Theory, Combinatorics and Valued fields
Experimental investigation of cloud formation and growth in turbulent... by Kamal Kant Chandrakar
Summer school and Discussion Meeting on Buoyancy-driven flows DATE: 12 June 2017 to 20 June 2017 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS, Bengaluru Buoyancy plays a major role in the dynamics of atmosphere and interiors of planets and stars, as well as in engineering applications. This field
From playlist Summer school and Discussion Meeting on Buoyancy-driven flows
Low-x theory and Jet Quenching (LTHJ - Lecture 1) by Edmond Iancu
PROGRAM THE MYRIAD COLORFUL WAYS OF UNDERSTANDING EXTREME QCD MATTER ORGANIZERS: Ayan Mukhopadhyay, Sayantan Sharma and Ravindran V DATE: 01 April 2019 to 17 April 2019 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS Bangalore Strongly interacting phases of QCD matter at extreme temperature and
From playlist The Myriad Colorful Ways of Understanding Extreme QCD Matter 2019
Status of experiments and simulations on scaling problems in turbulence - Katepalli Sreenivasan
Workshop on Turbulence Topic: Status of experiments and simulations on scaling problems in turbulence Speaker: Katepalli Sreenivasan Affiliation: New York University Date: December 11, 2020 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu
From playlist Mathematics
Logistic Regression Details Pt 3: R-squared and p-value
This video follows from where we left off in Part 2 in this series on the details of Logistic Regression. Last time we saw how to fit a squiggly line to the data. This time we'll learn how to evaluate if that squiggly line is worth anything. In short, we'll calculate the R-squared value a
From playlist StatQuest
From playlist h. Three-Dimensional Measurement
Yaiza Canzani: Understanding the growth of Laplace eigenfunctions (part 1 of 2)
In this talk we will discuss a new geodesic beam approach to understanding eigenfunction concentration. We characterize the features that cause an eigenfunction to saturate the standard supremum bounds in terms of the distribution of $L^{2}$ mass along geodesic tubes emanating from a point
From playlist Geometry
GW and NICER Constraints on Neutron Stars by J.M Lattimer
PROGRAM VIRTUAL MEETING ON COMPACT STARS AND QCD 2020 (ORIGINALLY "COMPACT STARS IN THE QCD PHASE DIAGRAM VIII: THE ERA OF MULTI-MESSENGER ASTRONOMY") ORGANIZERS: Manjari Bagchi, Sarmistha Banik, Sudip Bhattacharyya, Prashanth Jaikumar, V. Ravindran and Sayantan Sharma DATE : 17 August
scale for the mass of a watermelon
From playlist Common Core Standards - 7th Grade
Earth System Science 1: Intro to ESS. Lecture 12. Winds and Extreme Weather
UCI ESS 1: Introduction to Earth System Science (Fall 2013) Lec 12. Introduction to Earth System Science -- Winds and Extreme Weather -- View the complete course: http://ocw.uci.edu/courses/ess_1_introduction_to_earth_system_science.html Instructor: Julie Ferguson, Ph.D. License: Creative
From playlist Earth System Science 1: Introduction to Earth System Science