symmetrically dependent random variables - definição. O que é symmetrically dependent random variables. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é symmetrically dependent random variables - definição

Uncorrelatedness; Uncorrelated; Statistically uncorrelated; Uncorrelated random variables

Weakly dependent random variables         
In probability, weak dependence of random variables is a generalization of independence that is weaker than the concept of a martingale. A (time) sequence of random variables is weakly dependent if distinct portions of the sequence have a covariance that asymptotically decreases to 0 as the blocks are further separated in time.
Exchangeable random variables         
SEQUENCE OF RANDOM VARIABLES SUCH THAT, FOR ANY FINITE PERMUTATION OF THE INDICES, THE JOINT PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION OF THE PERMUTED SEQUENCE EQUALS THAT OF THE ORIGINAL
Exchangeable events; Interchangeable random variables; Exchangeability; Exchangeable sequence; Exchangeable random variable; Exchangeable matrix; Exchangeable correlation matrix
In statistics, an exchangeable sequence of random variables (also sometimes interchangeable) is a sequence X1, X2, X3, ... (which may be finitely or infinitely long) whose joint probability distribution does not change when the positions in the sequence in which finitely many of them appear are altered.
Exchangeability         
SEQUENCE OF RANDOM VARIABLES SUCH THAT, FOR ANY FINITE PERMUTATION OF THE INDICES, THE JOINT PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION OF THE PERMUTED SEQUENCE EQUALS THAT OF THE ORIGINAL
Exchangeable events; Interchangeable random variables; Exchangeability; Exchangeable sequence; Exchangeable random variable; Exchangeable matrix; Exchangeable correlation matrix
·noun The quality or state of being exchangeable.

Wikipédia

Uncorrelatedness (probability theory)

In probability theory and statistics, two real-valued random variables, X {\displaystyle X} , Y {\displaystyle Y} , are said to be uncorrelated if their covariance, cov [ X , Y ] = E [ X Y ] E [ X ] E [ Y ] {\displaystyle \operatorname {cov} [X,Y]=\operatorname {E} [XY]-\operatorname {E} [X]\operatorname {E} [Y]} , is zero. If two variables are uncorrelated, there is no linear relationship between them.

Uncorrelated random variables have a Pearson correlation coefficient, when it exists, of zero, except in the trivial case when either variable has zero variance (is a constant). In this case the correlation is undefined.

In general, uncorrelatedness is not the same as orthogonality, except in the special case where at least one of the two random variables has an expected value of 0. In this case, the covariance is the expectation of the product, and X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} are uncorrelated if and only if E [ X Y ] = 0 {\displaystyle \operatorname {E} [XY]=0} .

If X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} are independent, with finite second moments, then they are uncorrelated. However, not all uncorrelated variables are independent.: p. 155