Editing 2295: Garbage Math

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This comic illustrates the "{{w|garbage in, garbage out}}" concept using mathematical expressions. It shows how, if you have garbage as inputs to your calculations, then you will likely get garbage as a result, except when you multiply by zero, which eliminates all uncertainty of the result.  
 
This comic illustrates the "{{w|garbage in, garbage out}}" concept using mathematical expressions. It shows how, if you have garbage as inputs to your calculations, then you will likely get garbage as a result, except when you multiply by zero, which eliminates all uncertainty of the result.  
  
The propagation of errors in {{w|arithmetic}}, other {{w|mathematical operations}}, and {{w|statistics}} is described in colloquial terms. Numbers with low precision are termed garbage, while numbers with high precision are called precise. The table below quantifies the change in precision from the operands to their result in terms of their {{w|variance}}, represented by σ, the Greek lowercase letter sigma, equal to the {{w|standard deviation}}, or the square root of the variance. Variance or standard deviation are common specifications of uncertainty (as an alternative to, for example, a {{w|tolerance interval}}.)
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The propagation of errors in {{w|arithmetic}}, other {{w|mathematical operations}}, and {{w|statistics}} is described in colloquial terms. Unverified numbers or numbers with low precision are termed garbage, while verified numbers with high precision are called precise. The table below quantifies the change in precision from the operands to their result in terms of their {{w|variance}}, represented by σ, the Greek lowercase letter sigma, equal to the {{w|standard deviation}}, or the square root of the variance. Variance or standard deviation are common specifications of uncertainty (as an alternative to, for example, a {{w|tolerance interval}}.)
  
 
The {{w|accuracy and precision}} of mathematical operations correspond to the rules of {{w|Propagation_of_uncertainty#Example_formulae|propagation of uncertainty}}, where a "garbage" number would correspond to an estimate with a high degree of uncertainty, and a precise number has low uncertainty. The uncertainty of the result of such operations will usually correspond to the term with the highest uncertainty. The rule about N pieces of independent garbage used to calculate an {{w|arithmetic mean}} reflects how the {{w|central limit theorem}} predicts that the uncertainty (or {{w|standard error}}) of an estimate will be reduced when independent estimates are averaged.
 
The {{w|accuracy and precision}} of mathematical operations correspond to the rules of {{w|Propagation_of_uncertainty#Example_formulae|propagation of uncertainty}}, where a "garbage" number would correspond to an estimate with a high degree of uncertainty, and a precise number has low uncertainty. The uncertainty of the result of such operations will usually correspond to the term with the highest uncertainty. The rule about N pieces of independent garbage used to calculate an {{w|arithmetic mean}} reflects how the {{w|central limit theorem}} predicts that the uncertainty (or {{w|standard error}}) of an estimate will be reduced when independent estimates are averaged.

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