- Jun 30, 2003
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While going over some basics in one of my classes, my teacher got on the subject of distributions.
He claimed that most people base predictions in life based on Gaussian distributions, and as such, rare events that are predicted to virtually never happen do in fact happen (see the book "The Black Swan"). As such, events follow more of a Boltzmann distribution where the highly rare events at the extremes, though still unlikely, are more likely to occur than if represented by a Gaussian distribution (ie, economic behavior, etc.) and is one of the reasons why shit hit the fan economically.
I'm just curious if anyone can provide some insight on how things like this are predicted in real life - whether it's for finance/investing, insurance companies, whatever, and if the Gaussian distribution is indeed the one that is primarily used
Not bashing anyone, just genuinely curious
He claimed that most people base predictions in life based on Gaussian distributions, and as such, rare events that are predicted to virtually never happen do in fact happen (see the book "The Black Swan"). As such, events follow more of a Boltzmann distribution where the highly rare events at the extremes, though still unlikely, are more likely to occur than if represented by a Gaussian distribution (ie, economic behavior, etc.) and is one of the reasons why shit hit the fan economically.
I'm just curious if anyone can provide some insight on how things like this are predicted in real life - whether it's for finance/investing, insurance companies, whatever, and if the Gaussian distribution is indeed the one that is primarily used
Not bashing anyone, just genuinely curious