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by MauranKilom
1044 days ago
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Then what does 3% mean? Surely it means "given the data we have, one in every 33 will hit". Since that empirically doesn't happen, it must be that "the data we have" has a very low prior probability of being real. In other words, the measurement noise seems distributed in a way that over-represents unlikely trajectories. Hence it seems that it would lead to more accurate predictions if the measurements and their uncertainties were fitted to a model that corrects for the prior probability of observing an asteroid on a given trajectory/making a certain observation. This discrepancy between distribution of measurement error vs distribution of actual trajectories is what people are wondering about, because it seems interesting to know more about (e.g. "why are certain trajectories less likely?"). |
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It's is similar to P hacking.