The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was no consensus defaulting to Keep and w/o prejudice to a future renomination. Normally I would relist at least once but in this case we have a discussion with significant participation and opinions that are all over the place. I do not believe a relist would end with consensus. Ad Orientem (talk) 03:00, 10 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Normally distributed and uncorrelated does not imply independent[edit]

Normally distributed and uncorrelated does not imply independent (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log · Stats)
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Per WP:OR / WP:NOTESSAY, essentially. The whole thing boils down to "A Pearson's correlation coefficient of 0 does not mean variables are independent" (adding the normal distribution is a bit of a red herring). I do not see sources sufficient to establish that this very topic is anywhere close notable. It might be mentioned in a lot of places (e.g. ref 2) as a common student mistake, but not as an encyclopedic subject worthy of careful study.

If not kept, some cleanup is needed, as there are quite a few incoming links. A selective merge to the PCC article or the PCC section of correlation and dependence or might be workable. TigraanClick here to contact me 09:33, 2 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]

You seem to be missing the same point that the nominator missed: If this were to be merged into another article, it should be the articles on the normal distribution and the multivariate normal distribution. Nothing about the normal distribution need be included if they only point were to show that uncorrelatedness does not entail independence, but this article is explaining a fact about the normal distribution, not a fact about the relationship between independence and uncorrelatedness. Michael Hardy (talk) 00:36, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Somewhere in Multivariate_normal_distribution#Joint_normality, then? TigraanClick here to contact me 07:33, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Pages that have been merged to other articles should almost never be deleted (WP:MAD) Qwfp (talk) 18:55, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Deacon Vorbis: If it is merged, it should be to the currently brief section Multivariate normal distribution#Two normally distributed random variables need not be jointly bivariate normal. I’m not opposed in principle to doing this, but I’m concerned that the multivariate normal distribution article is already very long. Loraof (talk) 19:18, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Mathematics-related deletion discussions. MarginalCost (talk) 16:38, 2 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This material certainly does not belong at Pearson coefficient, and the suggestion that it could makes me more sympathetic to Michael Harry's comment than I was before. --2601:142:3:F83A:8985:D0DD:B024:F94C (talk) 11:54, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Then some other appropriate article about a theorem, method or technique (thanks JohnBlackburne). Just because you can come up with an example of something does not make it worthy of its own article. -mattbuck (Talk) 19:04, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Even this more general wording is wrong: if it were to be merged somewhere, it would be to an article about the (multivariate) normal distribution. Are you sure you have the competence necessary to judge whether this is of encyclopedic importance? Lots of "examples of something" are. --2601:142:3:F83A:181:62BC:A65:DA3F (talk) 21:05, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Mattbuck: You have missed the article's point entirely. The examples in this article are NOT notable among examples that are of importance in the topic of correlation, but they ARE relevant to the topic of the normal distribution, because JOINT normality plus uncorrelatedness does entail independence. Michael Hardy (talk) 21:12, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Once again, I feel like this validates Michael Hardy's comments. You clearly have failed to understand what the article is about. --2601:142:3:F83A:611C:BD4F:C063:4BF2 (talk) 12:42, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • John, please take a look at my comment above. That comment, and the article, point out that the joint normal distribution has a property that is not generally true across distributions, but the marginal normal distributions do not have this property. It’s entirely about the joint vs. marginal normal distributions. Perhaps the second sentence in the article (which I have now deleted) led some readers astray by going off on a brief irrelevant tangent about another distribution. Loraof (talk) 14:48, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@JohnBlackburne: You have missed the point of the article if you think there's nothing special about the normal distribution here. The topic of the article is NOT notable as a comment about correlation and dependence, but it IS notable as a fact about the normal distribution, because JOINT normality plus uncorrelatedness DOES entail independence. Michael Hardy (talk) 21:08, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
What would be nice is a short subsection in multivariate normal distribution with a ((main)) link to this article. Indeed, that's what we have now. --2601:142:3:F83A:181:62BC:A65:DA3F (talk) 21:07, 3 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I do not think anyone is arguing that examples and counterexamples should be excluded on principle from math articles - the question here is whether we need a standalone article. (And WP:ITSUSEFUL does not help.) We should not use summary style when the spin-off is not notable is itself (WP:AVOIDSPLIT). TigraanClick here to contact me 08:11, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
It's not a big deal to me whether it's a separate article but what you nominated the article for was deletion. If we merge it to another article while not losing any significant content then ok, but as someone else said, I don't see much urgency to it. Note also that the purpose of the those policies you keep mentioning is to improve the encyclopedia. So I'm unimpressed by arguments from wiki policy for any particular action, unless they can be supported by an explanation of how that action improves the encyclopedia directly. I haven't seen any attempt from you to do that so far. Following policy for its own sake is basically the definition of bureaucracy, and arguing purely from policy is wikilawyering, that should almost always be seen unfavorably. Policy is not an axiom system whose consequences are theorems. It's more like a low order regression-fit of past experience whose suggestions are at best approximate in any situation, and at worst completely off. So it always has to be checked against specific cases before applying it, if there is any doubt at all.

I therefore find your line of argument distasteful rather than persuasive. The most mathematically knowledgeable contributors here all seem to want to keep the article or at least preserve its contents, and that's good enough for me. 173.228.123.166 (talk) 15:20, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]

what you nominated the article for was deletion: Yes and no. If you know a better place than AfD to discuss cases where it is unclear whether the endgame is deletion, merge, redirect and to which target, please let me know, because I am not aware of one; WP:RM is pretty much a binary "move or not move", and WP:RFD rarely addresses historical content of the redirects.
I'm unimpressed by arguments from wiki policy for any particular action, unless they can be supported by an explanation of how that action improves the encyclopedia directly. You are reversing the burden of proof of WP:IAR / "guidelines are not absolute" here. If you want to argue IAR (i.e. that policy says to do X but the best outcome for the encyclopedia is Y), the onus is on you to demonstrate that special circumstances apply, or (reusing your metaphor) that the current datapoint does not fall on the fit line. Policies exist for a reason, and we do not rediscuss them at every application.
The most mathematically knowledgeable contributors here all seem to want to keep the article or at least preserve its contents, and that's good enough for me. - Well, that's an argument from authority, but more to the point mathematical competence is weakly correlated to Wikipedia article content handling. That line of reasoning leads straight to "we should defer to homeopaths/crystal healers/dowsers when it comes to content about homeopathy/crystal healing/dowsing", which is not going to happen and fortunately so. A better argument to make would have been "long-time Wikipedia editors with an interest in the subject topic want to keep" - in which case the argument of authority follows from Wikipedia tenure, not mathematics directly - but it still is fairly weak. TigraanClick here to contact me 11:27, 5 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This isn't the place for meta-philosophy but I think you are a little confused. IAR (simplified) is when you have an edit that's against policy but you decide to make it anyway because it's a good edit that improves the encyclopedia. The complementary situation, where your edit is allowed by policy but you decide not to make it because it's a lousy edit that doesn't improve the encyclopedia, is not IAR but is just common sense. If an edit doesn't improve the encyclopedia you shouldn't make it. It's never against policy to not make an edit. Therefore the only sound way to justify a proposed edit when people are unconvinced is to explain how it improves the encyclopedia, not what policy says about it. And I'd call it bloody obvious (WP:CIR) that in a question of math exposition (which is what this is), the views of the knowledgeable math editors have to carry greater weight than those of editors who are merely interested in the subject but don't understand it. "Wikipedia content handling" is supposed to serve the goal of exposition, not the other way around.

The usual place to propose an article merge is on the article talk page, not AfD. You can use the ((merge from)) talkpage template for the purpose. The talk page of the relevant wikiproject (WT:WPMATH for this) is probably also a good place to leave a notice. 173.228.123.166 (talk) 22:36, 5 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Science-related deletion discussions. Tyw7  (🗣️ Talk to me • ✍️ Contributions) 10:31, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Mathematics-related deletion discussions. Tyw7  (🗣️ Talk to me • ✍️ Contributions) 10:31, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
(1) The examples in this article are not particularly interesting as examples to illustrate the relationship between correlation and dependence. There are better examples for that purpose. They are better because they are simpler.
(2) However, these examples are of interest to understand something about the normal distribution: Despite the fact that JOINTLY normally distributed random variables are indeed independent if they are uncorrelated, nonetheless that conclusion is NOT true of MARGINALLY normally distributed random variables. Illustrating that point is what the examples are for.
If there is some article into which this should be merged, it would be about the multivariate normal distribution, not about correlation. Michael Hardy (talk) 21:23, 4 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Michael Hardy: Having read your previous comments, I agree about the better merge target.
In the interest of keeping the debate civil and on-point, could you please say whether, in your opinion, the topic described in the current article is notable (as in standalone-article-worthy), based either on current sourcing or other sources to specify? TigraanClick here to contact me 11:38, 5 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I voted above to keep the article. I think it could also be merged into Multivariate normal distribution. Michael Hardy (talk) 20:28, 5 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
You did, but I do not see you having addressed the notability issue. TigraanClick here to contact me 09:21, 6 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
This is a completely inappropriate merge target, as has been explained several times above! --128.164.177.55 (talk) 20:31, 6 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Seems fine to me, but I'm not bothered if the target is a different article. There's plenty of candidates. --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 10:22, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I do not understand how people who fail to understand what the article is about, and to follow a discussion about it, believe that they can have a sensible opinion about whether its subject is notable or not! --2601:142:3:F83A:716E:8F86:6A20:1BE3 (talk) 13:06, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Being a modeler, I understand it just fine, thanks. In my judgement it fits well with that topic. Unlike you I am however not going to blow a capillary if it is integrated into any one of a number of other primary articles on statistical independence, correlation, or the normal distribution. --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 13:18, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
You are not "blowing a capilary" (by the way, let me leave this here) because you are not in the situation of having to explain to someone that a short article on the eating habits of ''Pantera leo'' should not be merged into an article on Cuisines of Central Africa. If we did the merge you suggest, any reasonable editor of the target article would immediately remove it as off-topic. Do you understand this? If your substantive grasp here is that weak, on what basis should anyone value your !vote? --2601:142:3:F83A:E1C6:E1B2:1AC1:FC7E (talk) 13:30, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Huh, italics don't work inside Wikilinks -- has that always been true? --2601:142:3:F83A:E1C6:E1B2:1AC1:FC7E (talk) 13:31, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
As I said, there are other valid targets, as long it gets merged. You are welcome to continue raging about that particular choice of merge target; not going to respond to the histrionics any further. --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 15:45, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I would ask the closing admin to take into account this user's obvious lack of WP:COMPETENCE when evaluating the consensus here. -2601:142:3:F83A:38D7::BE37:3E0B:C907 (talk) 00:35, 8 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I would ask the hyperventilating editor to stop confusing "differing assessment" with "WRONG!!!". Amazing how everyone who disagrees with you lacks competence... it must be very lonely at the top... --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 07:58, 8 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, well, if being a complete asshole while refusing to address the substantive issue makes you feel better, there is nothing that I can do to stop you. Nevertheless, the opinions of a person who behaves like that should be given 0 weight in any discussion of technical issues. --2601:142:3:F83A:7CB5:5BF:7962:D897 (talk) 23:24, 8 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) The examples are constructed to make it easy to verify that they have the relevant properties. (Of course.) It is not clear what "real world" you speak of, but in the real mathematical world they have exactly the following relevance: their existence indicates that a certain implication (two random variables are known to be marginally normal and uncorrelated; therefore they are independent) may *not* be employed without verifying additional hypotheses (that the variables are jointly normal). This kind of example (contrived for easy verification) is extremely common in mathematics textbooks. --2601:142:3:F83A:7D60:3341:364B:EE37 (talk) 22:03, 9 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.