hesitograms
Hesitograms are a theoretical concept in probability and statistics, representing a probability distribution that is not continuous or discrete but rather a mixture of both. They arise in situations where an observation can take on a continuous range of values or can land exactly on a specific value with a non-zero probability.
The term "hesitogram" was coined by Dr. Donald Berry in the context of medical research, particularly in
Mathematically, a hesitogram can be represented as a sum of a continuous distribution function and a discrete
The analysis of hesitograms requires statistical methods that can accommodate both continuous and discrete components. Standard