Peirce's criterion

Peirce's criterion

Peirce's criterion is a method, devised by Benjamin Peirce, that may be used to eliminate suspect experimental data using probability theory.

Description

For scientists, engineers and others involved in real data collection, the situation often arises in which one or more of the measured values appears to be outside the usual range. The temptation to ignore this data with rationalisations such as blaming faulty recording equipment ( the equipment had a power surge, there was dirt in the lens) should be resisted. Instead of arbitrarily dropping data, Peirce's Criterion (1) may be applied. The possibility of more than one suspect experimental data value is also included.

The method is similar to the commonly used "Chauvenet's criterion"; however, Peirce's criterion is a more rigorous theoretical development based on the Gaussian distribution which can be applied to more than one suspect data value. In fact, Chauvenet refers to the prior work of Peirce, writing, in his original work: "What I have given may serve the purpose of giving the reader greater confidence in the correctness and value of Peirce's criterion."

The method can be applied using a table which lists criterion values corresponding to the number of data values. The table in reference 2 allows for up to 60 data measurements. Hawkins (3) provides a formula for the criterion.

ee also

*Outlier

References

1.Benjamin Peirce, [http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?1852AJ......2..161P;data_type=PDF_HIGH "Criterion for the Rejection of Doubtful Observations"] , Astronomical Journal II 45 (1852) and [http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?1852AJ......2..176P;data_type=PDF_HIGH "Errata to the original paper"] .

2. Stephen Ross, "Peirce's Criterion for the Elimination of Suspect Experimental Data", J. Engr. Technology, Fall, 2003. [http://newton.newhaven.edu/sross/piercescriterion.pdf]

3. D.M. Hawkins (1980). Identification of outliers. Chapman and Hall, London. p10


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Peirce — may mean:*Benjamin Peirce, American mathematician, author of an article on rejection of data outliers Peirce s Criterion, and father of Charles Peirce *Bill Peirce (born 1938), economist, Professor Emeritus at Case Western Reserve University, and …   Wikipedia

  • Peirce, Charles Sanders — American pragmatism Peirce Cheryl Misak INTRODUCTION Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914), one of America’s greatest philosophers, mathematicians, and logicians, was a difficult and not altogether pleasant character. That, combined with what the… …   History of philosophy

  • Chauvenet's criterion — In statistical theory, the Chauvenet s criterion (named for William Chauvenet[1]) is a means of assessing whether one piece of experimental data an outlier from a set of observations, is likely to be spurious. To apply Chauvenet s criterion,… …   Wikipedia

  • Charles Sanders Peirce bibliography — C. S. Peirce articles  General:    Charles Sanders Peirce Charles Sanders Peirce bibliography Philosophical:    Categories (Peirce) Semiotic elements and   classes of signs (Peirce) Pragmatic maxim • Pragmaticism… …   Wikipedia

  • James, William — American pragmatism James J.E.Tiles THE BERKELEY LECTURE Pragmatism was introduced to society in a lecture given by William James1 to the Philosophical Union at the University of California in Berkeley on 26 August 1898.2 In his lecture James… …   History of philosophy

  • Outlier — This article is about the statistical term. For other uses, see Outlier (disambiguation). Figure 1. Box plot of data from the Michelson Morley Experiment displaying outliers in the middle column. In statistics, an outlier[1] is an observ …   Wikipedia

  • List of statistics topics — Please add any Wikipedia articles related to statistics that are not already on this list.The Related changes link in the margin of this page (below search) leads to a list of the most recent changes to the articles listed below. To see the most… …   Wikipedia

  • List of mathematics articles (P) — NOTOC P P = NP problem P adic analysis P adic number P adic order P compact group P group P² irreducible P Laplacian P matrix P rep P value P vector P y method Pacific Journal of Mathematics Package merge algorithm Packed storage matrix Packing… …   Wikipedia

  • Deviance (statistics) — In statistics, deviance is a quality of fit statistic for a model that is often used for statistical hypothesis testing. The deviance for a model M0 is defined as Here denotes the fitted values of the parameters in the model M0, while denotes the …   Wikipedia

  • Grubbs' test for outliers — Many statistical techniques are sensitive to the presence of outliers. For example, simple calculations of the mean and standard deviation may be distorted by a single grossly inaccurate data point.Checking for outliers should be a routine part… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”