probabilistic - meaning and definition. What is probabilistic
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What (who) is probabilistic - definition

MEASURE OF THE EXPECTATION THAT AN EVENT WILL OCCUR OR A STATEMENT IS TRUE
Probality; Probabilistic; Probabilities; Probability calculus; Improbability; Probability.; Probable; Propability; Forward probability; Applications of probability theory
  • Carl Friedrich Gauss
  • [[Gerolamo Cardano]] (16th century)
  • [[Christiaan Huygens]] published one of the first books on probability (17th century)
  • The probabilities of rolling several numbers using two dice.

probabilistic         
Probabilistic actions, methods, or arguments are based on the idea that you cannot be certain about results or future events but you can judge whether or not they are likely, and act on the basis of this judgment. (FORMAL)
...probabilistic exposure to risk.
ADJ: usu ADJ n
probabilistic         
¦ adjective based on or adapted to a theory of probability; involving chance variation.
Derivatives
probabilistically adverb
probabilistic         
<probability> Relating to, or governed by, probability. The behaviour of a probabilistic system cannot be predicted exactly but the probability of certain behaviours is known. Such systems may be simulated using pseudorandom numbers. Evolutionary computation uses probabilistic processes to generate new (potential) solutions to a problem. See also deterministic, non-probabilistic. (1995-09-22)

Wikipedia

Probability

In science, the probability of an event is a number that indicates how likely the event is to occur. It is expressed as a number in the range from 0 and 1, or, using percentage notation, in the range from 0% to 100%. The more likely it is that the event will occur, the higher its probability. The probability of an impossible event is 0; that of an event that is certain to occur is 1. The probabilities of two complementary events A and B – either A occurs or B occurs – add up to 1. A simple example is the tossing of a fair (unbiased) coin. If a coin is fair, the two possible outcomes ("heads" and "tails") are equally likely; since these two outcomes are complementary and the probability of "heads" equals the probability of "tails", the probability of each of the two outcomes equals 1/2 (which could also be written as 0.5 or 50%).

These concepts have been given an axiomatic mathematical formalization in probability theory, a branch of mathematics that is used in areas of study such as statistics, mathematics, science, finance, gambling, artificial intelligence, machine learning, computer science and game theory to, for example, draw inferences about the expected frequency of events. Probability theory is also used to describe the underlying mechanics and regularities of complex systems.

Examples of use of probabilistic
1. Yet the probabilistic nature of those results is potentially problematic, said J.
2. Judgments of Probabilistic Conditions by Doctors and Laypeople" by Andrea D.
3. Even if all of them were known, they could at best provide a probabilistic estimate.
4. His work led him to discover a new world, the bizarre realm of quantum mechanics, where matter is both a particle and a wave and where the predictable stability of Newton gives way to probabilistic uncertainty.