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Title Pitfalls in likelihood land
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Author(s) Fowlie, Andrew (speaker) (Nanjing Normal University)
Corporate author(s) CERN. Geneva
Imprint 2021-02-18. - 1522.
Series (LPCC Workshops)
((Re)interpreting the results of new physics searches at the LHC)
Lecture note on 2021-02-18T13:00:00
Subject category LPCC Workshops
Abstract The starting point for a statistically sound reinterpretation of an experimental result is the likelihood function, which encodes the probability of the observed data given an assumed model. When multiple experimental results are considered, as in global fits, a composite likelihood function is used, constructed from likelihood components for all the measurements included in the fit. In most cases the formulation of a likelihood function necessarily involves some approximations. In this talk we will discuss some challenges and subtleties associated with the construction and use of approximate likelihood functions. In particular, we consider how different levels of detail in the likelihood information can impact the results of global fits, and the associated computational expense.
Copyright/License © 2021-2024 CERN
Submitted by sabine.kraml@cern.ch

 


 Record created 2021-02-19, last modified 2024-06-26


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