The problems and paradoxes of the classical interpretation of probability motivated the development of the relative frequency concept of probability.
Most of the mathematics commonly used to make statistical estimates or tests are developed by statisticians who use this concept. They are usually called frequentists, and their position is called frequentism. A statistician who uses these methods of inference is therefore referred to as a frequentist statistician. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term 'frequentist' (one who believes that the probability of an event should be defined as the limit of its relative frequency in a large number of trials) was first used by M. G. Kendall * in 1949, who observed
Frequentists talk about probabilities only when dealing with well-defined random experiments. The set of all possible outcomes of a random experiment is called the sample space of the experiment. An event is defined as a particular subset of the sample space that you want to consider. For any event only two things can happen; it occurs or it occurs not. The relative frequency of occurrence of an event, in a number of repetitions of the experiment, is a measure of the probability of that event.
This school is often associated with the names of Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson who described the logic of statistical hypothesis testing. Other influential figures of the frequentist school include John Venn, R.A. Fisher, and Richard von Mises.
Frequentistischer Wahrscheinlichkeitsbegriff | Prawdopodobieństwo obiektywne | Frequency probability
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"Frequency probability".
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