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Monte Carlo method: Difference between revisions

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==Definitions==
There is no consensus on how ''Monte Carlo'' should be defined. For example, Ripley<ref name=Ripley>{{harvnb|Ripley|1987}}</ref> defines most probabilistic modeling as ''[[stochastic simulation]]'', with ''Monte Carlo'' being reserved for [[Monte Carlo integration]] and Monte Carlo statistical tests. [[Shlomo Sawilowsky|Sawilowsky]]<ref name=Sawilowsky>{{harvnb|Sawilowsky|2003}}</ref> distinguishes between a [[simulation]], a Monte Carlo method, and a Monte Carlo simulation: a simulation is a fictitious representation of reality, a Monte Carlo method is a technique that can be used to solve a mathematical or statistical problem, and a Monte Carlo simulation uses repeated sampling to obtain the statistical properties of some phenomenon (or behavior). Examples:
 
Here are the examples:
* Simulation: Drawing ''one'' pseudo-random uniform variable from the interval [0,1] can be used to simulate the tossing of a coin: If the value is less than or equal to 0.50 designate the outcome as heads, but if the value is greater than 0.50 designate the outcome as tails. This is a simulation, but not a Monte Carlo simulation.
* Monte Carlo method: Pouring out a box of coins on a table, and then computing the ratio of coins that land heads versus tails is a Monte Carlo method of determining the behavior of repeated coin tosses, but it is not a simulation.