Leptokurtic Distribution
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
probability theory Probability theory or probability calculus is the branch of mathematics concerned with probability. Although there are several different probability interpretations, probability theory treats the concept in a rigorous mathematical manner by expre ...
and
statistics Statistics (from German language, German: ', "description of a State (polity), state, a country") is the discipline that concerns the collection, organization, analysis, interpretation, and presentation of data. In applying statistics to a s ...
, kurtosis (from , ''kyrtos'' or ''kurtos'', meaning "curved, arching") refers to the degree of “tailedness” in the
probability distribution In probability theory and statistics, a probability distribution is a Function (mathematics), function that gives the probabilities of occurrence of possible events for an Experiment (probability theory), experiment. It is a mathematical descri ...
of a
real-valued In mathematics, value may refer to several, strongly related notions. In general, a mathematical value may be any definite mathematical object. In elementary mathematics, this is most often a number – for example, a real number such as or an ...
random variable A random variable (also called random quantity, aleatory variable, or stochastic variable) is a Mathematics, mathematical formalization of a quantity or object which depends on randomness, random events. The term 'random variable' in its mathema ...
. Similar to
skewness In probability theory and statistics, skewness is a measure of the asymmetry of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable about its mean. The skewness value can be positive, zero, negative, or undefined. For a unimodal ...
, kurtosis provides insight into specific characteristics of a distribution. Various methods exist for quantifying kurtosis in theoretical distributions, and corresponding techniques allow estimation based on sample data from a population. It’s important to note that different measures of kurtosis can yield varying interpretations. The standard measure of a distribution's kurtosis, originating with
Karl Pearson Karl Pearson (; born Carl Pearson; 27 March 1857 – 27 April 1936) was an English biostatistician and mathematician. He has been credited with establishing the discipline of mathematical statistics. He founded the world's first university ...
, is a scaled version of the fourth moment of the distribution. This number is related to the tails of the distribution, not its peak; hence, the sometimes-seen characterization of kurtosis as "
peakedness In probability theory and statistics, a shape parameter (also known as form parameter) is a kind of numerical parameter of a parametric family of probability distributionsEveritt B.S. (2002) Cambridge Dictionary of Statistics. 2nd Edition. CUP. t ...
" is incorrect. For this measure, higher kurtosis corresponds to greater extremity of deviations (or
outlier In statistics, an outlier is a data point that differs significantly from other observations. An outlier may be due to a variability in the measurement, an indication of novel data, or it may be the result of experimental error; the latter are ...
s), and not the configuration of data near the mean. Excess kurtosis, typically compared to a value of 0, characterizes the “tailedness” of a distribution. A univariate
normal distribution In probability theory and statistics, a normal distribution or Gaussian distribution is a type of continuous probability distribution for a real-valued random variable. The general form of its probability density function is f(x) = \frac ...
has an excess kurtosis of 0. Negative excess kurtosis indicates a platykurtic distribution, which doesn’t necessarily have a flat top but produces fewer or less extreme outliers than the normal distribution. For instance, the Uniform distribution (continuous), uniform distribution (i.e. one that is uniformly finite over some bound and zero elsewhere) is platykurtic. On the other hand, positive excess kurtosis signifies a leptokurtic distribution. The Laplace distribution, for example, has tails that decay more slowly than a Gaussian, resulting in more outliers. To simplify comparison with the normal distribution, excess kurtosis is calculated as Pearson’s kurtosis minus 3. Some authors and software packages use “kurtosis” to refer specifically to excess kurtosis, but this article distinguishes between the two for clarity. Alternative measures of kurtosis are: the L-kurtosis, which is a scaled version of the fourth L-moment; measures based on four population or sample quantiles. These are analogous to the alternative measures of
skewness In probability theory and statistics, skewness is a measure of the asymmetry of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable about its mean. The skewness value can be positive, zero, negative, or undefined. For a unimodal ...
that are not based on ordinary moments.


Pearson moments

The kurtosis is the fourth standardized moment, defined as \operatorname[X] = \operatorname\left[^4\right] = \frac = \frac, where is the fourth central moment and is the standard deviation. Several letters are used in the literature to denote the kurtosis. A very common choice is , which is fine as long as it is clear that it does not refer to a cumulant. Other choices include , to be similar to the notation for skewness, although sometimes this is instead reserved for the excess kurtosis. The kurtosis is bounded below by the squared
skewness In probability theory and statistics, skewness is a measure of the asymmetry of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable about its mean. The skewness value can be positive, zero, negative, or undefined. For a unimodal ...
plus 1: \frac \geq \left(\frac\right)^2 + 1, where is the third central moment. The lower bound is realized by the Bernoulli distribution. There is no upper limit to the kurtosis of a general probability distribution, and it may be infinite. A reason why some authors favor the excess kurtosis is that cumulants are intensive and extensive properties, extensive. Formulas related to the extensive property are more naturally expressed in terms of the excess kurtosis. For example, let be independent random variables for which the fourth moment exists, and let be the random variable defined by the sum of the . The excess kurtosis of is \operatorname[Y] - 3 = \frac \sum_^n \sigma_i^ \cdot \left(\operatorname\left[X_i\right] - 3\right), where \sigma_i is the standard deviation of . In particular if all of the have the same variance, then this simplifies to \operatorname[Y] - 3 = \frac \sum_^n \left(\operatorname\left[X_i\right] - 3\right). The reason not to subtract 3 is that the bare moment (statistics), moment better generalizes to multivariate distributions, especially when independence is not assumed. The cokurtosis between pairs of variables is an order four tensor. For a bivariate normal distribution, the cokurtosis tensor has off-diagonal terms that are neither 0 nor 3 in general, so attempting to "correct" for an excess becomes confusing. It is true, however, that the joint cumulants of degree greater than two for any multivariate normal distribution are zero. For two random variables, and , not necessarily independent, the kurtosis of the sum, , is \begin \operatorname[X+Y] = \frac \big( & \sigma_X^4\operatorname[X] \\ & + 4\sigma_X^3 \sigma_Y \operatorname[X,X,X,Y] \\[6pt] & + 6\sigma_X^2 \sigma_Y^2 \operatorname[X,X,Y,Y] \\[6pt] & + 4\sigma_X \sigma_Y^3 \operatorname[X,Y,Y,Y] \\[6pt] & + \sigma_Y^4 \operatorname[Y] \big). \end Note that the fourth-power binomial coefficients (1, 4, 6, 4, 1) appear in the above equation.


Interpretation

The interpretation of the Pearson measure of kurtosis (or excess kurtosis) was once debated, but it is now well-established. As noted by Westfall in 2014, "...''its unambiguous interpretation relates to tail extremity.'' Specifically, it reflects either the presence of existing outliers (for sample kurtosis) or the tendency to produce outliers (for the kurtosis of a probability distribution). The underlying logic is straightforward: Kurtosis represents the average (or expected value) of standardized data raised to the fourth power. Standardized values less than 1—corresponding to data within one standard deviation of the mean (where the “peak” occurs)—contribute minimally to kurtosis. This is because raising a number less than 1 to the fourth power brings it closer to zero. The meaningful contributors to kurtosis are data values outside the peak region, i.e., the outliers. Therefore, kurtosis primarily measures outliers and provides no information about the central "peak". Numerous misconceptions about kurtosis relate to notions of peakedness. One such misconception is that kurtosis measures both the “peakedness” of a distribution and the heavy-tailed distribution, heaviness of its tail . Other incorrect interpretations include notions like “lack of shoulders” (where the “shoulder” refers vaguely to the area between the peak and the tail, or more specifically, the region about one standard deviation from the mean) or “bimodality.” Balanda and Helen MacGillivray, MacGillivray argue that the standard definition of kurtosis “poorly captures the kurtosis, peakedness, or tail weight of a distribution.”Instead, they propose a vague definition of kurtosis as the location- and scale-free movement of probability mass from the distribution’s shoulders into its center and tails.


Moors' interpretation

In 1986, Moors gave an interpretation of kurtosis. Let Z = \frac \sigma, where is a random variable, is the mean and is the standard deviation. Now by definition of the kurtosis \kappa , and by the well-known identity \operatorname\left[V^2\right] = \operatorname[V] + \operatorname[V]^2, \begin \kappa & = \operatorname\left[ Z^4 \right] \\ & = \operatorname\left[ Z^2 \right] + \operatorname^2 \\ & = \operatorname\left[ Z^2 \right] + \operatorname[Z]^2 = \operatorname\left[ Z^2 \right] + 1. \end The kurtosis can now be seen as a measure of the dispersion of around its expectation. Alternatively it can be seen to be a measure of the dispersion of around and . attains its minimal value in a symmetric two-point distribution. In terms of the original variable , the kurtosis is a measure of the dispersion of around the two values . High values of arise in two circumstances: * where the probability mass is concentrated around the mean and the data-generating process produces occasional values far from the mean * where the probability mass is concentrated in the tails of the distribution.


Maximal entropy

The Differential entropy, entropy of a distribution is -\!\int p(x) \ln p(x) \, dx. For any \mu \in \R^n, \Sigma \in \R^ with \Sigma positive definite, among all probability distributions on \R^n with mean \mu and covariance \Sigma, the normal distribution \mathcal N(\mu, \Sigma) has the largest entropy. Since mean \mu and covariance \Sigma are the first two moments, it is natural to consider extension to higher moments. In fact, by Lagrange multiplier method, for any prescribed first n moments, if there exists some probability distribution of form p(x) \propto e^ that has the prescribed moments (if it is feasible), then it is the maximal entropy distribution under the given constraints. By serial expansion, \begin & \int \frac e^ x^ \, dx \\[6pt] &= \frac \int e^ x^ \, dx \\[6pt] &= \sum_k \frac \left(-\frac\right)^k (2n+4k-1)!! \\[6pt] &= (2n-1)!! - \tfrac g (2n+3)!! + O(g^2) \end so if a random variable has probability distribution p(x) = e^/Z, where Z is a normalization constant, then its kurtosis is


Excess kurtosis

The ''excess kurtosis'' is defined as kurtosis minus 3. There are 3 distinct regimes as described below.


Mesokurtic

Distributions with zero excess kurtosis are called mesokurtic, or mesokurtotic. The most prominent example of a mesokurtic distribution is the normal distribution family, regardless of the values of its parameters. A few other well-known distributions can be mesokurtic, depending on parameter values: for example, the binomial distribution is mesokurtic for p = 1/2 \pm \sqrt.


Leptokurtic

A distribution with Positive number, positive excess kurtosis is called leptokurtic, or leptokurtotic. "Lepto-" means "slender". A leptokurtic distribution has ''Fat-tailed distribution, fatter tails''. Examples of leptokurtic distributions include the Student's t-distribution, Rayleigh distribution, Laplace distribution, exponential distribution, Poisson distribution and the logistic distribution. Such distributions are sometimes termed ''super-Gaussian''.


Platykurtic

A distribution with Negative number, negative excess kurtosis is called platykurtic, or platykurtotic. "Platy-" means "broad". A platykurtic distribution has ''thinner tails''. Examples of platykurtic distributions include the Continuous uniform distribution, continuous and discrete uniform distributions, and the raised cosine distribution. The most platykurtic distribution of all is the Bernoulli distribution with ''p'' = 1/2 (for example the number of times one obtains "heads" when flipping a coin once, a coin toss), for which the excess kurtosis is −2.


Graphical examples


The Pearson type VII family

The effects of kurtosis are illustrated using a parametric family of distributions whose kurtosis can be adjusted while their lower-order moments and cumulants remain constant. Consider the Pearson distribution, Pearson type VII family, which is a special case of the Pearson distribution, Pearson type IV family restricted to symmetric densities. The probability density function is given by f(x; a, m) = \frac \left[1+\left(\frac\right)^2 \right]^, where is a scale parameter and is a shape parameter. All densities in this family are symmetric. The -th moment exists provided . For the kurtosis to exist, we require . Then the mean and
skewness In probability theory and statistics, skewness is a measure of the asymmetry of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable about its mean. The skewness value can be positive, zero, negative, or undefined. For a unimodal ...
exist and are both identically zero. Setting makes the variance equal to unity. Then the only free parameter is , which controls the fourth moment (and cumulant) and hence the kurtosis. One can reparameterize with m = 5/2 + 3/\gamma_2, where \gamma_2 is the excess kurtosis as defined above. This yields a one-parameter leptokurtic family with zero mean, unit variance, zero skewness, and arbitrary non-negative excess kurtosis. The reparameterized density is g(x; \gamma_2) = f. In the limit as \gamma_2 \to \infty one obtains the density g(x) = 3\left(2 + x^2\right)^, which is shown as the red curve in the images on the right. In the other direction as \gamma_2 \to 0 one obtains the normal distribution, standard normal density as the limiting distribution, shown as the black curve. In the images on the right, the blue curve represents the density x \mapsto g(x; 2) with excess kurtosis of 2. The top image shows that leptokurtic densities in this family have a higher peak than the mesokurtic normal density, although this conclusion is only valid for this select family of distributions. The comparatively fatter tails of the leptokurtic densities are illustrated in the second image, which plots the natural logarithm of the Pearson type VII densities: the black curve is the logarithm of the standard normal density, which is a parabola. One can see that the normal density allocates little probability mass to the regions far from the mean ("has thin tails"), compared with the blue curve of the leptokurtic Pearson type VII density with excess kurtosis of 2. Between the blue curve and the black are other Pearson type VII densities with  = 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, and 1/16. The red curve again shows the upper limit of the Pearson type VII family, with \gamma_2 = \infty (which, strictly speaking, means that the fourth moment does not exist). The red curve decreases the slowest as one moves outward from the origin ("has fat tails").


Other well-known distributions

Several well-known, unimodal, and symmetric distributions from different parametric families are compared here. Each has a mean and skewness of zero. The parameters have been chosen to result in a variance equal to 1 in each case. The images on the right show curves for the following seven densities, on a linear scale and logarithmic scale: * D: Laplace distribution, also known as the double exponential distribution, red curve (two straight lines in the log-scale plot), excess kurtosis = 3 * S: hyperbolic secant distribution, orange curve, excess kurtosis = 2 * L: logistic distribution, green curve, excess kurtosis = 1.2 * N:
normal distribution In probability theory and statistics, a normal distribution or Gaussian distribution is a type of continuous probability distribution for a real-valued random variable. The general form of its probability density function is f(x) = \frac ...
, black curve (inverted parabola in the log-scale plot), excess kurtosis = 0 * C: raised cosine distribution, cyan curve, excess kurtosis = −0.593762... * W: Wigner semicircle distribution, blue curve, excess kurtosis = −1 * U: uniform distribution (continuous), uniform distribution, magenta curve (shown for clarity as a rectangle in both images), excess kurtosis = −1.2. Note that in these cases the platykurtic densities have bounded Support (mathematics), support, whereas the densities with positive or zero excess kurtosis are supported on the whole real line. One cannot infer that high or low kurtosis distributions have the characteristics indicated by these examples. There exist platykurtic densities with infinite support, *e.g., exponential power distributions with sufficiently large shape parameter ''b'' and there exist leptokurtic densities with finite support. *e.g., a distribution that is uniform between −3 and −0.3, between −0.3 and 0.3, and between 0.3 and 3, with the same density in the (−3, −0.3) and (0.3, 3) intervals, but with 20 times more density in the (−0.3, 0.3) interval Also, there exist platykurtic densities with infinite peakedness, *e.g., an equal mixture of the beta distribution with parameters 0.5 and 1 with its reflection about 0.0 and there exist leptokurtic densities that appear flat-topped, *e.g., a mixture of distribution that is uniform between −1 and 1 with a T(4.0000001) Student's t-distribution, with mixing probabilities 0.999 and 0.001.


Sample kurtosis


Definitions


A natural but biased estimator

For a sample (statistics), sample of ''n'' values, a Method of moments (statistics), method of moments estimator of the population excess kurtosis can be defined as g_2 = \frac -3 = \frac - 3 where is the fourth sample moment about the mean, ''m''2 is the second sample moment about the mean (that is, the sample variance), is the -th value, and \overline is the sample mean. This formula has the simpler representation, g_2 = \frac \sum_^n z_i^4 - 3 where the z_i values are the standardized data values using the standard deviation defined using rather than in the denominator. For example, suppose the data values are 0, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 0, 2, 1, 3, 2, 0, 2, 2, 3, 2, 5, 2, 3, 999. Then the values are −0.239, −0.225, −0.221, −0.234, −0.230, −0.225, −0.239, −0.230, −0.234, −0.225, −0.230, −0.239, −0.230, −0.230, −0.225, −0.230, −0.216, −0.230, −0.225, 4.359 and the values are 0.003, 0.003, 0.002, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.003, 0.002, 0.003, 0.003, 360.976. The average of these values is 18.05 and the excess kurtosis is thus . This example makes it clear that data near the "middle" or "peak" of the distribution do not contribute to the kurtosis statistic, hence kurtosis does not measure "peakedness". It is simply a measure of the outlier, 999 in this example.


Standard unbiased estimator

Given a sub-set of samples from a population, the sample excess kurtosis g_2 above is a biased estimator of the population excess kurtosis. An alternative estimator of the population excess kurtosis, which is unbiased in random samples of a normal distribution, is defined as follows: \begin G_2 & = \frac = \frac \; \frac \\[6pt] & = \frac \left[(n+1)\,\frac - 3\,(n-1) \right] \\[6pt] & = \frac \left[(n+1)\,g_2 + 6 \right] \\[6pt] & = \frac \; \frac - 3\,\frac \\[6pt] & = \frac \; \frac - 3\,\frac \end where is the unique symmetric bias of an estimator, unbiased estimator of the fourth cumulant, is the unbiased estimate of the second cumulant (identical to the unbiased estimate of the sample variance), is the fourth sample moment about the mean, is the second sample moment about the mean, is the -th value, and \bar is the sample mean. This adjusted Fisher–Pearson standardized moment coefficient G_2 is the version found in Microsoft Excel, Excel and several statistical packages including Minitab, SAS (software), SAS, and SPSS.Doane DP, Seward LE (2011) J Stat Educ 19 (2) Unfortunately, in nonnormal samples G_2 is itself generally biased.


Upper bound

An upper bound for the sample kurtosis of () real numbers is g_2 \le \frac \frac g_1^2 + \frac - 3. where g_1 = m_3/m_2^ is the corresponding sample skewness.


Variance under normality

The variance of the sample kurtosis of a sample of size from the
normal distribution In probability theory and statistics, a normal distribution or Gaussian distribution is a type of continuous probability distribution for a real-valued random variable. The general form of its probability density function is f(x) = \frac ...
is \operatorname(g_2) = \frac Stated differently, under the assumption that the underlying random variable X is normally distributed, it can be shown that \sqrt g_2 \,\xrightarrow\, \mathcal(0, 24).


Applications

The sample kurtosis is a useful measure of whether there is a problem with outliers in a data set. Larger kurtosis indicates a more serious outlier problem, and may lead the researcher to choose alternative statistical methods. D'Agostino's K-squared test is a goodness-of-fit normality test based on a combination of the sample skewness and sample kurtosis, as is the Jarque–Bera test for normality. For non-normal samples, the variance of the sample variance depends on the kurtosis; for details, please see Variance#Distribution of the sample variance, variance. Pearson's definition of kurtosis is used as an indicator of intermittency in turbulence. It is also used in magnetic resonance imaging to quantify non-Gaussian diffusion. A concrete example is the following lemma by He, Zhang, and Zhang: Assume a random variable has expectation \operatorname[X] = \mu, variance \operatorname\left[(X - \mu)^2\right] = \sigma^2 and kurtosis \kappa = \tfrac \operatorname\left[(X - \mu)^4\right]. Assume we sample n = \tfrac \kappa \log\tfrac many independent copies. Then \Pr\left[\max_^n X_i \le \mu\right] \le \delta \quad\text\quad \Pr\left[\min_^n X_i \ge \mu\right] \le \delta. This shows that with \Theta(\kappa\log\tfrac\delta) many samples, we will see one that is above the expectation with probability at least 1-\delta. In other words: If the kurtosis is large, we might see a lot values either all below or above the mean.


Kurtosis convergence

Applying band-pass filters to digital images, kurtosis values tend to be uniform, independent of the range of the filter. This behavior, termed ''kurtosis convergence'', can be used to detect image splicing in forensic analysis.


Seismic signal analysis

Kurtosis can be used in geophysics to distinguish different types of Seismology, seismic signals. It is particularly effective in differentiating seismic signals generated by human footsteps from other signals. This is useful in security and surveillance systems that rely on seismic detection.


Weather prediction

In meteorology, kurtosis is used to analyze weather data distributions. It helps predict extreme weather events by assessing the probability of outlier values in historical data, which is valuable for long-term climate studies and short-term weather forecasting.


Other measures

A different measure of "kurtosis" is provided by using L-moments instead of the ordinary moments.


See also

* Kurtosis risk * Maximum entropy probability distribution


References


Further reading


Alternative source
(Comparison of kurtosis estimators) *


External links

*
Kurtosis calculator

Free Online Software (Calculator)
computes various types of skewness and kurtosis statistics for any dataset (includes small and large sample tests)..

on th


Celebrating 100 years of Kurtosis
a history of the topic, with different measures of kurtosis. {{Statistics, descriptive Moments (mathematics) Statistical deviation and dispersion