outliers

listen to the pronunciation of outliers
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
aykırılıklar
outlier
sapkin gozlem, aykiri deger
outlier
(Bilgisayar,Jeoloji) aykırı değer
outlier
(Bilgisayar,Jeoloji) sapkın gözlem
outlier
sapkin gözlem
outlier
şahit tepe
outlier
(İstatistik) İstatistik ve ekonometride belirli bir dağılımın ortalamasına çok uzak değerler alan veri, dışadüşen olarak bilinir
outlier
tanıktepe
outlier
dış mostra (yaşlı kayaçlar tarafından çevrelenen genç kaya penceresi)
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
(Data Analysis) Data values in a time series which are significantly different from the series trend and/or other data values such that their inclusion may jeopardize the model's ability to fit the data If such sample data values cannot be explained by other, external factors, then they should probably be omitted from the model estimation process altogether
Technically, outliers are data items that did not (or are thought not to have) come from the assumed population of data -- for example, a non-numeric when you are expecting only numeric values A more casual usage refers to data items that fall outside the boundaries that enclose most other data items in the data set
unexpected responses usually produced by agents and objects far from one another in location along the variable
In all histogram options an analysis is taken up to see the outliers This applies to the DATA/VIEW EDIT option where the columns are looked at via the Alt-C keystroke Secondly the ANALYSIS/RESIDUALS HISTOGRAM option allows you in the same way to detect the interesting outliers The fit that has a high breakpoint with respect to outliers is the ANALYSIS/LEAST MEDIAN SQUARES option
Patients with unique conditions or illnesses that cannot be classified under the standard groups
Medicare patients whose illnesses are unique and whose conditions may not be classifiable under one of the diagnostic related groups
Type of weed habit
Those patients with a specific admitting diagnosis that either have a shorter or longer length of stay than the usual range for that diagnosis
Data points which do not appear to follow the characteristic distribution of the rest of the data These may reflect genuine properties of the underlying phenomenon (variable), or be due to measurement errors or other anomalies which should not be modeled
plural of outlier
In healthcare the term is used in two ways To refer to a hospital patient accommodated in a different ward from that specialising in the relevant medical diagnosis The term may be used in the examination of data where results fall well outside the pattern for the majority of NHS Trusts with similar units
observations that differ markedly from the pattern established by the vast majority
An extreme value that does not fit into the normal range of values for a given variable; for example, in a sample of test scores if most students score between a 75 and a 98, a student with a score of 30 would be an outlier
Cases with extremely long lengths-of-stay (day outliers) or extraordinarily high costs (cost outliers) compared with others classified in the same diagnosis-related group Hospitals receive additional PPS payments for these cases
observations which are a considerable distance from the line
outlier
A value in a statistical sample which does not fit a pattern that describes most other data points; specifically, a value that lies 1.5 IQR beyond the upper or lower quartile
outlier
A person or thing away from others or outside its proper place
outlier
A part of a formation separated from the rest of the formation by erosion
outlier
- A POPULATION that occurs outside the main RANGE of the SPECIES
outlier
One who does not live where his office, or business, or estate, is
outlier
An area or group of rocks that are surrounded by rocks of an older age
outlier
A comparative term describing a patient whose stay in the hospital is unusually long or whose costs for hospital care are unusually high compared to other patients with the same diagnosis or condition The Medicare program uses DRGs as categories to identify outliers Under Medicare, additional payments are made for outliers meeting certain conditions
outlier
– Term typically used in utilization review to describe a provider who uses too many or too few services
outlier
A part of a rock or stratum lying without, or beyond, the main body, from which it has been separated by denudation
outlier
{i} person or thing that lies outside of or away from; person who lives some distance from his place of work; section of rock separated from the main formation by erosion (Geology)
outlier
A patient who varies significantly from other patients in the same DRG (such as a longer or shorter length of stay, death, leaving against medical advice, etc ) Also, a person whose performance varies significantly from established normative standards (e g , a physician whose utilization patterns are notably abnormal)
outlier
An additional payment made to hospitals for certain clients under age 21 for exceptionally long or expensive hospital stays
outlier
An extreme point that stands out from the rest of the distribution
outlier
A patient record with an unusually high or low value, given the DRG There are two ways that a record can become an outlier First, the facility may identify a record as an outlier when submitting its patient data Second, severity analysis software may determine that the reported value is significantly greater or less than the norm, given the DRG
outlier
A node whose exclusion from its containing peer group would significantly improve the accuracy and simplicity of the aggregation of the remainder of the peer group topology
outlier
departure from an average, usually defined as at least two standard deviations from the mean; in managed care systems these are frequently consumers for whom expenditures are more than the average, lengths of stay in inpatient care is greater than is typical for persons with a similar condition or consumers who are given exceptional treatment subject to peer review and organization review
outlier
a hospital admission requiring either substantially more expense or a much longer length of stay than average Under DRG reimbursement, outliers are given exceptional treatment (subject to peer review and organization review)
outlier
a person who lives away from his place of work
outlier
A standing stone set apart from the main formation of a stone circle, sometimes in an astronomically significant direction (for example midsummer's sunrise) Sometimes they mark the "entrance" to a stone circle Examples are the Heel Stone at Stonehenge and the King Stone at the Rollright Stones
outlier
A data point (or points) that lie far outside most of the rest of the points in the data set
outlier
One who does not fall within the norm; term typically used in utilization review A provider who uses either too many or too few services (for example, anyone whose utilization differs 2 standard deviations from the mean on a bell curve is termed an "outlier ")
outlier
A data point or observation that does not fit the pattern shown by the remaining data; an unusually small or unusually large data value
outlier
an extreme deviation from the mean a person who lives away from his place of work
outlier
On a histogram or scatter diagram, a point that does not fall into the pattern of the others
outlier
That which lies, or is, away from the main body
outlier
(Ticaret) An observed value so far removed from the normal distribution that it may be considered an abnormality or one-time event, and is often not included in future calculations based on that set of data
outlier
A statistical term referring to isolated data values that fall well outside the range of values measured for nearly all other data points in a given set of observations Various conventions exist for deciding when a given data value should be considered an outlier (e g if it falls 4 or more standard deviations above or below the mean for that set of observations) Outliers are sometimes indicative of data-entry errors or other types of artifacts, and therefore need to be scrutinized carefully before attempting to perform statistical analyses with a given set of data
outlier
An individual who does not fall within the norm This term often refers to providers who use significantly more or less resources than their peers For example, any provider whose utilization differs two standard deviations from the mean on a bell curve may be deemed as outlier The term "outlier" can also refer to enrollees who consume significantly more or less resources than most patients with their diagnoses
outlier
Generally, an unusual case In the DRG context, an admitted patient who stays much longer (day outlier) or who costs much more (cost outlier) than the average for the DRG to which the episode belongs (Eagar, K & Hindle, D 1994, The Australian Casemix Dictionary, National Casemix Education Series No 9, Department of Human Services & Health, Canberra)
outlier
A data value that does not follow the characteristic distribution of a given set of data A data value that falls far above or far below the middle of a distribution
outlier
A measurement (from a radar detection system) that has a (set of) state value(s) outside the three-times-standard-deviation interval around the mean value(s) or outside a user specified limit
outlier
An outlier is an observation that is many SD's from the mean It is sometimes tempting to discard outliers, but this is imprudent unless the cause of the outlier can be identified, and the outlier is determined to be spurious Otherwise, discarding outliers can cause one to underestimate the true variability of the measurement process
outlier
an observed value that appears to be discordant from the other observations in a sample One of a set of observations that appears to be discordant from the others The declaration of an outlier is dependent on the significance level of the applied identification test See also Significance level
outlier
an extreme deviation from the mean
outlier
A data value which is unusual with respect to the group of data in which it is found It may be a single isolated value far away from all the others, or a value which does not follow the general pattern of the rest Most classical statistical techniques tend to be quite sensitive to outliers, so that it is important to be on the alert for them Graphical techniques, particularly residual plots, are very helpful in detecting the presence of outliers Some of the newer Exploratory Data Analysis techniques and nonparametric procedures are much less sensitive to outliers (such procedures are said to be robust)
outlier
A data point that is outside a statistical range Frequently refers to a treatment that is unusually long or expensive for its type
outliers

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    ... of "The Tipping Point," "Blink," "Outliers," et cetera. ...
    ... In your last book, "Outliers," you spoke about the advantages ...
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