In probability and statistics, a circular distribution or polar distribution is a probability distribution of a random variable whose values are angles, usually taken to be in the range [0, 2π).[1] A circular distribution is often a continuous probability distribution, and hence has a probability density, but such distributions can also be discrete, in which case they are called circular lattice distributions.[1] Circular distributions can be used even when the variables concerned are not explicitly angles: the main consideration is that there is not usually any real distinction between events occurring at the opposite ends of the range, and the division of the range could notionally be made at any point.

Graphical representation

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If a circular distribution has a density

 

it can be graphically represented as a closed curve

 

where the radius   is set equal to

 

and where a and b are chosen on the basis of appearance.

Examples

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By computing the probability distribution of angles along a handwritten ink trace, a lobe-shaped polar distribution emerges. The main direction of the lobe in the first quadrant corresponds to the slant of handwriting (see: graphonomics).

An example of a circular lattice distribution would be the probability of being born in a given month of the year, with each calendar month being thought of as arranged round a circle, so that "January" is next to "December".

Any probability density function (pdf)   on the line can be "wrapped" around the circumference of a circle of unit radius.[2] That is, the pdf of the wrapped variable   is  

This concept can be extended to the multivariate context by an extension of the simple sum to a number of   sums that cover all dimensions in the feature space:   where   is the  -th Euclidean basis vector.

The following sections show some relevant circular distributions.

von Mises circular distribution

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The von Mises distribution is a circular distribution which, like any other circular distribution, may be thought of as a wrapping of a certain linear probability distribution around the circle. The underlying linear probability distribution for the von Mises distribution is mathematically intractable; however, for statistical purposes, there is no need to deal with the underlying linear distribution. The usefulness of the von Mises distribution is twofold: it is the most mathematically tractable of all circular distributions, allowing simpler statistical analysis, and it is a close approximation to the wrapped normal distribution, which, analogously to the linear normal distribution, is important because it is the limiting case for the sum of a large number of small angular deviations. In fact, the von Mises distribution is often known as the "circular normal" distribution because of its ease of use and its close relationship to the wrapped normal distribution.[3]

The pdf of the von Mises distribution is:   where   is the modified Bessel function of order 0.

Circular uniform distribution

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The probability density function (pdf) of the circular uniform distribution is given by  

It can also be thought of as   of the von Mises above.

Wrapped normal distribution

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The pdf of the wrapped normal distribution (WN) is:   where μ and σ are the mean and standard deviation of the unwrapped distribution, respectively and   is the Jacobi theta function:   where   and  

Wrapped Cauchy distribution

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The pdf of the wrapped Cauchy distribution (WC) is:   where   is the scale factor and   is the peak position.

Wrapped Lévy distribution

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The pdf of the wrapped Lévy distribution (WL) is:   where the value of the summand is taken to be zero when  ,   is the scale factor and   is the location parameter.

Projected normal distribution

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The projected normal distribution is a circular distribution representing the direction of a random variable with multivariate normal distribution, obtained by radial projection of the variable over the unit (n-1)-sphere. Due to this, and unlike other commonly used circular distributions, it is not symmetric nor unimodal.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Dodge, Y. (2006). The Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms. OUP. ISBN 0-19-920613-9.
  2. ^ Bahlmann, C., (2006), Directional features in online handwriting recognition, Pattern Recognition, 39
  3. ^ Fisher 1993.

Sources

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