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prognosen

Prognosen are statements about future outcomes. They are generated by analyzing data, patterns, and models to forecast what may happen under certain conditions. The term is the plural of Prognose, and in German usage covers projections across many fields. The English equivalent is prognosis (singular) or prognoses (plural). Etymology: from Greek pro-, gnósis knowledge beforehand.

In medicine, prognoses estimate disease trajectory and survival probabilities, guide treatment choices, and risk stratify patients.

In weather forecasting, prognosen describe likely atmospheric states across time horizons, produced by numerical weather models

Methodology and uncertainty: Prognosen rely on historical data, statistical methods, and, increasingly, machine learning. Uncertainty is

Limitations: Prognosen may be affected by data quality, model misspecification, changing conditions, and rare events. Users

They
incorporate
patient
factors,
disease
stage,
biomarkers,
and
treatment
effects,
often
reported
as
survival
curves
or
likelihoods
over
time.
and
ensemble
methods.
Long-range
forecasts
emphasize
probabilities
or
scenarios
rather
than
certainties.
In
economics
and
business,
prognosen
project
growth,
inflation,
demand,
or
earnings
using
time-series
models
and
scenario
analysis.
communicated
via
probability
estimates,
confidence
or
prediction
intervals,
and
multi-scenario
ranges.
Model
validation,
calibration,
and
out-of-sample
testing
are
essential
to
assess
reliability.
should
interpret
forecasts
as
conditional
estimates,
not
guarantees,
and
consider
scenario
planning.