Symmetric probability distribution
In statistics, a symmetric distribution or symmetric probability distribution is a probability distribution—an assignment of probabilities to possible occurrences—which is unchanged when its probability density function or probability mass function is reflected around a vertical line at some value of the random variable represented by the distribution. This vertical line is the line of symmetry of the distribution. Thus the probability of being any given distance on one side of the value about which symmetry occurs is the same as the probability of being the same distance on the other side of that value.
Formal definition
A probability distribution is said to be symmetric if and only if there exists a value such that
- for all real numbers
where f is the probability density function if the distribution is continuous or the probability mass function if the distribution is discrete.
Properties
- The median and the mean of a symmetric distribution both occur at the point about which the symmetry occurs.
- All odd central moments of a symmetric distribution equal zero, because in the calculation of such moments the negative terms arising from negative deviations from the mean exactly balance the positive terms arising from equal positive deviations from the mean.
Probability density function
Typically a symmetric continuous distribution's probability density function contains the index value only in the context of a term where is some positive integer (usually 1). This quadratic or other even-powered term takes on the same value for as for , giving symmetry about .
Partial list of examples
The following distributions are symmetric for all parametrizations. (Many other distributions are symmetric for a particular parametrization.)