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A weight function is a mathematical device used when performing a sum, integral, or average in order to give some elements more "weight" or influence on the result than other elements in the same set. They occur frequently in statistics and analysis, and are closely related to the concept of a measure. Weight functions can be employed in both discrete and continuous settings. They can be used to construct systems of calculus called "weighted calculus"[1] and "meta-calculus"[2].
[edit] Discrete weights[edit] General definitionIn the discrete setting, a weight function If the function
but given a weight function
One common application of weighted sums arises in numerical integration. If B is a finite subset of A, one can replace the unweighted cardinality |B| of B by the weighted cardinality If A is a finite non-empty set, one can replace the unweighted mean or average by the weighted mean or weighted average In this case only the relative weights are relevant. [edit] StatisticsWeighted means are commonly used in statistics to compensate for the presence of bias. For a quantity f measured multiple independent times fi with variance [edit] MechanicsThe terminology weight function arises from mechanics: if one has a collection of n objects on a lever, with weights
which is also the weighted average of the positions [edit] Continuous weightsIn the continuous setting, a weight is a positive measure such as w(x)dx on some domain Ω,which is typically a subset of an Euclidean space [edit] General definitionIf can be generalized to the weighted integral Note that one may need to require f to be absolutely integrable with respect to the weight w(x)dx in order for this integral to be finite. [edit] Weighted volumeIf E is a subset of Ω, then the volume vol(E) of E can be generalized to the weighted volume
[edit] Weighted averageIf Ω has finite non-zero weighted volume, then we can replace the unweighted average by the weighted average [edit] Inner productIf to a weighted inner product See the entry on Orthogonality for more details. [edit] See also[edit] References
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