Skewness
Negative binomial distribution skewness.
The skewness for a negative binomial random variable is
where r
is the number of successes until experiment is stopped and p
is the success probability in each trial. The random variable X
denotes the number of failures until the r
success is reached.
Usage
var skewness = require( '@stdlib/stats/base/dists/negative-binomial/skewness' );
skewness( r, p )
Returns the skewness of a negative binomial distribution with parameters r
(number of successes until experiment is stopped) and p
(success probability).
var v = skewness( 100, 0.2 );
// returns ~0.201
v = skewness( 50, 0.5 );
// returns ~0.3
If provided NaN
as any argument, the function returns NaN
.
var v = skewness( NaN, 0.5 );
// returns NaN
v = skewness( 20, NaN );
// returns NaN
If provided a r
which is not a positive number, the function returns NaN
.
var v = skewness( -2.0, 0.5 );
// returns NaN
If provided a success probability p
outside of [0,1]
, the function returns NaN
.
var v = skewness( 20, -1.0 );
// returns NaN
v = skewness( 20, 1.5 );
// returns NaN
Examples
var randu = require( '@stdlib/random/base/randu' );
var skewness = require( '@stdlib/stats/base/dists/negative-binomial/skewness' );
var v;
var i;
var r;
var p;
for ( i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
r = randu() * 100;
p = randu();
v = skewness( r, p );
console.log( 'r: %d, p: %d, skew(X;r,p): %d', r, p.toFixed( 4 ), v.toFixed( 4 ) );
}