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Definition of Stochasticity
1. Noun. The quality of lacking any predictable order or plan.
Generic synonyms: Irregularity, Unregularity
Specialized synonyms: Ergodicity
Derivative terms: Haphazard, Random
Definition of Stochasticity
1. Noun. the quality of lacking any predictable order or plan ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stochasticity
Literary usage of Stochasticity
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ecological Risk Assessment Issue Papersby DIANE Publishing Company by DIANE Publishing Company (1995)
"stochasticity, Inherent Unpredictability, and Dose Response As noted in section
3.2, there appears to be a stochastic element to whether a propagule ..."
2. The California Spotted Owl: A Technical Assessment of Its Current Status. by Jared Verner (1994)
"Démographie stochasticity—random fluctuations in birth and death rates.
Density-dependent—process, such as fecundity, whose value depends on the density of ..."
3. Monitoring Bird Populations by Point Counts edited by C. John Ralph, John R. Sauer, Sam Droege (1998)
"stochasticity in the transition probabilities p and r was introduced as random
multiplicative effects. A year-specific, site-specific p became a product of ..."
4. Biodiversity and the Management of the Madrean Archipelago: The Sky Islands edited by Leonard F. DeBano (1999)
"... extinction (demographic, genetic, and environmental stochasticity) and
recolonization (dispersal capabilities; physiological and ecological tolerances). ..."
5. Distributions with Fixed Marginals and Related Topics by Ludger Rüschendorf, Berthold Schweizer, Michael Dee Taylor (1996)
"SLi(TL ) Actions and Double stochasticity. Let G be a compact abelian group.
In this section we study a special class of doubly stochastic measures on G x ..."
6. Selected Proceedings of the Symposium on Estimating Functions by Ishwar V. Basawa, V. P. Godambe, Robert Lee Taylor (1997)
"{bi(t)} may be thought of as incorporating environmental stochasticity. For example,
weather conditions might make {bj(<)} random variables ..."