Consider a "discrete" random variable X . A mode of X is just a maximizer of P (

Yasmin Camacho

Yasmin Camacho

Answered question

2022-05-28

Consider a "discrete" random variable X. A mode of X is just a maximizer of P ( X = x ). This is obviously useful, and we can easily see that a mode is a "most likely" value for X.
If, instead, we have a "continuous" real-valued random variable X with a PDF f X , I think we usually define a mode of X to be a maximizer of f X . I have two questions:
1. How can we interpret the mode of a continuous random variable? In other words, why is the mode of a continuous random variable useful to probability theory?
2. Is there a more general definition of mode, removing the assumptions above that X is real-valued and has a PDF?

Answer & Explanation

Tyree Duke

Tyree Duke

Beginner2022-05-29Added 10 answers

Intuitively, the significance of a mode (in the sense of a density maximizer) is that for sufficiently small fixed interval size ϵ, a real-valued random variable X having density f is more likely to realize values in an interval containing the mode than otherwise. Letting ϵ 0 then gives rise to a mode. More formally, by the fundamental theorem of calculus, a mode m satisfies
m arg max a lim ϵ 0 1 ϵ a a + ϵ f ( x ) d x .
As for your question on usefulness, finding a mode for a continuous distribution has applications in estimation theory, among other things (e.g. MLE, MAP). Given that a mode captures where data is "most likely" to occur (in the above limit sense), finding a mode gives at least a compelling way to choose an estimator.
Camille Flynn

Camille Flynn

Beginner2022-05-30Added 6 answers

The intuition for the probability density function f X ( x ) of a random variable X is that the chance of X taking values between a ± d x / 2 for some very small d x is given by f X ( a ) d x. This makes sense in that Ω f X ( x ) d x = 1 so that the sum of all these "infinitesimal probabilities" is 1.
So if f X ( m ) is the maximal value of f X ( x ) then the chance of X taking values between m ± d x / 2 is larger that the chance of X taking values in any other interval of length d x (for "small" d x). This intuition is what justifies calling m the mode of X.

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