We critically review the development of the concept of kurtosis. We conclude that it is best to define kurtosis vaguely as the location- and scale-free movement of probability mass from the shoulders of a distribution into its center and tails and to recognize that it can be formalized in many ways. These formalizations are best expressed in terms of location- and scale-free partial orderings on distributions and the measures that preserve them. The role of scale- matching techniques and placement of shoulders in the formalizations that have appeared in the literature are emphasized
New, functional, concepts of skewness and kurtosis are introduced for large classes of continuous un...
Kurtosis, usually as measured by the standardised fourth central moment, has been examined on a numb...
We first describe a class of quantile-based kurtosis orderings on symmetric distributions that use d...
We critically review the development of the concept of kurtosis. We conclude that it is best to defi...
An increase in kurtosis is achieved through the location- and scale-free movement of probability mas...
The standardized fourth central moment (standardized according to the variance) is often regarded as...
For symmetric unimodal distributions, positive kurtosis indicates heavy tails and peakedness relativ...
International audienceIn various studies on blind separation of sources, one assumes that sources ha...
Two families of kurtosis measures are defined as K1(b) = E[ab-|z|] and K2(b) = E[a(1 - |z|b)] where ...
The concept of kurtosis is used to describe and compare theoretical and empirical distributions in a...
Theoretical considerations of kurtosis, whether of partial orderings of distributions with respect t...
International audienceIn this paper we point out some important properties of the normalized fourth-...
This article proposes a simple method to visualize peak and tails in continuous distributions with f...
Kurtosis (k) is any measure of the "peakedness" of a distribution of a real-valued random variable. ...
A number of measures of peakedness, shoulder heaviness and tailedness have been proposed in literatu...
New, functional, concepts of skewness and kurtosis are introduced for large classes of continuous un...
Kurtosis, usually as measured by the standardised fourth central moment, has been examined on a numb...
We first describe a class of quantile-based kurtosis orderings on symmetric distributions that use d...
We critically review the development of the concept of kurtosis. We conclude that it is best to defi...
An increase in kurtosis is achieved through the location- and scale-free movement of probability mas...
The standardized fourth central moment (standardized according to the variance) is often regarded as...
For symmetric unimodal distributions, positive kurtosis indicates heavy tails and peakedness relativ...
International audienceIn various studies on blind separation of sources, one assumes that sources ha...
Two families of kurtosis measures are defined as K1(b) = E[ab-|z|] and K2(b) = E[a(1 - |z|b)] where ...
The concept of kurtosis is used to describe and compare theoretical and empirical distributions in a...
Theoretical considerations of kurtosis, whether of partial orderings of distributions with respect t...
International audienceIn this paper we point out some important properties of the normalized fourth-...
This article proposes a simple method to visualize peak and tails in continuous distributions with f...
Kurtosis (k) is any measure of the "peakedness" of a distribution of a real-valued random variable. ...
A number of measures of peakedness, shoulder heaviness and tailedness have been proposed in literatu...
New, functional, concepts of skewness and kurtosis are introduced for large classes of continuous un...
Kurtosis, usually as measured by the standardised fourth central moment, has been examined on a numb...
We first describe a class of quantile-based kurtosis orderings on symmetric distributions that use d...