quantile element - meaning and definition. What is quantile element
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What (who) is quantile element - definition

GRAPHICAL METHOD IN STATISTICS FOR COMPARING TWO PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTIONS
Qq plot; Quantile-Quantile Plot; Quantile-quantile plot; Quantile plot; Plotting position; Qqnorm; Normal qq plot; Q-q plot; Probability plot correlation coefficient; QQ plot; Q-Q plot; Qq-plot; Normal quantile plot; QQplot; Qqplot
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Element (mathematics)         
ANY ONE OF THE DISTINCT OBJECTS THAT MAKE UP A SET IN SET THEORY
Element (math); Element (set theory); ∈; ∉; Element (set); Set membership; ∋; Set element; Element (statistics); In (set); Element (group theory); Membership (set theory); ∊; ∍; ∌; Belongs to; Membership relation; Element of; /in
In mathematics, an element (or member) of a set is any one of the distinct objects that belong to that set.
Element (criminal law)         
FACT THAT MUST BE PROVEN, UNDER USA CRIMINAL LAW
Elements of crime; Element of a crime; Element (criminal); Elements of an offense; Elements of the offense; Element of the offense; Element of an offense; Criminal elements
Under United States law, an element of a crime (or element of an offense) is one of a set of facts that must all be proven to convict a defendant of a crime. Before a court finds a defendant guilty of a criminal offense, the prosecution must present evidence that, even when opposed by any evidence the defense may choose, is credible and sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed each element of the particular crime charged.
Quantile         
CUTPOINT DIVIDING A SET OF OBSERVATIONS INTO EQUAL SIZED GROUPS
Quantiles; Fractile; Tercile; Tertile; Draft:Ventile (quantile); Millile
In statistics and probability, quantiles are cut points dividing the range of a probability distribution into continuous intervals with equal probabilities, or dividing the observations in a sample in the same way. There is one fewer quantile than the number of groups created.

Wikipedia

Q–Q plot

In statistics, a Q–Q plot (quantile-quantile plot) is a probability plot, a graphical method for comparing two probability distributions by plotting their quantiles against each other. A point (x, y) on the plot corresponds to one of the quantiles of the second distribution (y-coordinate) plotted against the same quantile of the first distribution (x-coordinate). This defines a parametric curve where the parameter is the index of the quantile interval.

If the two distributions being compared are similar, the points in the Q–Q plot will approximately lie on the identity line y = x. If the distributions are linearly related, the points in the Q–Q plot will approximately lie on a line, but not necessarily on the line y = x. Q–Q plots can also be used as a graphical means of estimating parameters in a location-scale family of distributions.

A Q–Q plot is used to compare the shapes of distributions, providing a graphical view of how properties such as location, scale, and skewness are similar or different in the two distributions. Q–Q plots can be used to compare collections of data, or theoretical distributions. The use of Q–Q plots to compare two samples of data can be viewed as a non-parametric approach to comparing their underlying distributions. A Q–Q plot is generally more diagnostic than comparing the samples' histograms, but is less widely known. Q–Q plots are commonly used to compare a data set to a theoretical model. This can provide an assessment of goodness of fit that is graphical, rather than reducing to a numerical summary statistic. Q–Q plots are also used to compare two theoretical distributions to each other. Since Q–Q plots compare distributions, there is no need for the values to be observed as pairs, as in a scatter plot, or even for the numbers of values in the two groups being compared to be equal.

The term "probability plot" sometimes refers specifically to a Q–Q plot, sometimes to a more general class of plots, and sometimes to the less commonly used P–P plot. The probability plot correlation coefficient plot (PPCC plot) is a quantity derived from the idea of Q–Q plots, which measures the agreement of a fitted distribution with observed data and which is sometimes used as a means of fitting a distribution to data.