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January 19

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Help identifying statistics(?) notation

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I recently saw the equation fragment

and I feel like I recognise it from my previous statistics education, but I can't quite place it — does anyone know what refers to in this context? — crh23 (Talk) 12:21, 19 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]

The hat generally indicates a statistical estimate of some population parameter or other population characteristic.[1][2] So this denotes an estimate of but what the latter stands for, I cannot tell. It might help if you revealed the source – presumably not a napkin.  --Lambiam 15:08, 19 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]
This is actually mentioned in our article Estimator: "An estimator of is usually denoted by the symbol ." And Hat operator § Estimated value has: "In statistics, the hat is used to denote an estimator or an estimated value."  --Lambiam 01:37, 20 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]
The blackboard bold "E" usually means expectation and the subscript tells you the distribution over which one takes the expectation. Robinh (talk) 19:15, 20 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks to all for the replies, I realise I phrased my question poorly: I am aware of the notation (hat-notation for an estimator, expectation over a distribution, K-L divergence), but I am trying to figure out where that (partial) equation comes from, i.e. what actually is that an estimator of it could take that form. — crh23 (Talk) 22:34, 26 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Have a look at equation (9) of the paper "EDDI: Efficient Dynamic Discovery of High-Value Information with Partial VAE".  --Lambiam 00:45, 27 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]