numpy.random.Generator.power¶
method
-
Generator.
power
(a, size=None)¶ Draws samples in [0, 1] from a power distribution with positive exponent a - 1.
Also known as the power function distribution.
Parameters: - a : float or array_like of floats
Parameter of the distribution. Must be non-negative.
- size : int or tuple of ints, optional
Output shape. If the given shape is, e.g.,
(m, n, k)
, thenm * n * k
samples are drawn. If size isNone
(default), a single value is returned ifa
is a scalar. Otherwise,np.array(a).size
samples are drawn.
Returns: - out : ndarray or scalar
Drawn samples from the parameterized power distribution.
Raises: - ValueError
If a < 1.
Notes
The probability density function is
The power function distribution is just the inverse of the Pareto distribution. It may also be seen as a special case of the Beta distribution.
It is used, for example, in modeling the over-reporting of insurance claims.
References
[1] Christian Kleiber, Samuel Kotz, “Statistical size distributions in economics and actuarial sciences”, Wiley, 2003. [2] Heckert, N. A. and Filliben, James J. “NIST Handbook 148: Dataplot Reference Manual, Volume 2: Let Subcommands and Library Functions”, National Institute of Standards and Technology Handbook Series, June 2003. https://www.itl.nist.gov/div898/software/dataplot/refman2/auxillar/powpdf.pdf Examples
Draw samples from the distribution:
>>> rng = np.random.default_rng() >>> a = 5. # shape >>> samples = 1000 >>> s = rng.power(a, samples)
Display the histogram of the samples, along with the probability density function:
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> count, bins, ignored = plt.hist(s, bins=30) >>> x = np.linspace(0, 1, 100) >>> y = a*x**(a-1.) >>> normed_y = samples*np.diff(bins)[0]*y >>> plt.plot(x, normed_y) >>> plt.show()
Compare the power function distribution to the inverse of the Pareto.
>>> from scipy import stats # doctest: +SKIP >>> rvs = rng.power(5, 1000000) >>> rvsp = rng.pareto(5, 1000000) >>> xx = np.linspace(0,1,100) >>> powpdf = stats.powerlaw.pdf(xx,5) # doctest: +SKIP
>>> plt.figure() >>> plt.hist(rvs, bins=50, density=True) >>> plt.plot(xx,powpdf,'r-') # doctest: +SKIP >>> plt.title('power(5)')
>>> plt.figure() >>> plt.hist(1./(1.+rvsp), bins=50, density=True) >>> plt.plot(xx,powpdf,'r-') # doctest: +SKIP >>> plt.title('inverse of 1 + Generator.pareto(5)')
>>> plt.figure() >>> plt.hist(1./(1.+rvsp), bins=50, density=True) >>> plt.plot(xx,powpdf,'r-') # doctest: +SKIP >>> plt.title('inverse of stats.pareto(5)')