T O P I C R E V I E W |
dominik.mierzwa |
Posted - 10/16/2018 : 3:51:35 PM Origin Ver. and Service Release (Select Help-->About Origin): Operating System:
Hi there, In this topic:
https://my.originlab.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=44293
I asked about the meaning of reduced chi-square. Well I'm still really confused about this parameter especially that Origin documentation is inconsistent in this topic. Moreover, I found this topic https://my.originlab.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4058 which is also related to the meaning of this parameter. In my opinion it was not fully explained
Generally in all source reduced chi-square is defined as follows:
![](https://my.originlab.com/ftp/forum_and_kbase/Images/red_chi.jpg)
source Bevington Data reduction and error analysis in physical sciences pp 194-195.
Same definition may be find here: https://www.originlab.com/doc/Quick-Help/Bad-ReducedChiSqr
In this case the reduced chi-square is the ratio of estimated variance and the parent variance so it should be close to the 1 (for good fit)
But here we have got another definition: https://www.originlab.com/doc/Origin-Help/NLFit-Theory#Scale_Error_with_sqrt.28Reduced_Chi-Sqr.29
which is different, but same as variance s^2 in Bevington (without weighting):
![](https://my.originlab.com/ftp/forum_and_kbase/Images/s^22.jpg)
According to this site: https://www.originlab.com/doc/Origin-Help/Interpret-Regression-Result#Scale_Error_with_sqrt.28Reduced_Chi-Sqr.29 the reduced chi-squared = RSS/DOF should also be close to 1 can you explain me why? If it is a variance (as s^2 in Bevington) the smaller RSS/DOF the better fit is and it should not be equal 1 (especially if DOF is very big)
Can someone explain me this discrepancies, I'm really confused but I know that in statistics details are key-meaning. Thank you
Kind regards, Dominik |
5 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
dominik.mierzwa |
Posted - 10/22/2018 : 08:28:02 AM Thank you!
Kind regards, Dominik |
Shirley_GZ |
Posted - 10/22/2018 : 06:03:53 AM Hi Dominik,
I think the description in this FAQ is clearly enough, https://www.originlab.com/doc/Quick-Help/Bad-ReducedChiSqr
quote: If a weight is included in the fitting process and the Reduced Chi-Sqr is very different from 1, please examine if an improper weighting method is chosen. If the Reduced Chi-Sqr value is much smaller than 1, it may indicate a too large weight. Vice versa.
Thanks, Shirley
Originlab Technical Service Team |
dominik.mierzwa |
Posted - 10/18/2018 : 03:12:27 AM Hi Shirley,
I checked once again the notation and you are absolutely right. In the case of instrumental weighing, where RSS = sum[wi*(yi-yf)^2] wi=1/sigma(i)^2 the equation is coherent with the general one.
But if another weighting method is chosen or there is no weighing and: RSS = sum(yi-yf)^2
Should reduced chi-square be still close to 1?
Kind regards, Dominik |
dominik.mierzwa |
Posted - 10/17/2018 : 06:55:47 AM Hi Shirley,
Please see the s^2 in above post. It is exactly the 'reduced chi-square' defined in Origin documentation:
reduced chi-square = RSS/DOF
where RSS = sum[wi*(yi-yf)^2] DOF = N-m wi - weight (in instrumental: 1/<sigma(i)>^2> yi - i-th experimental value of y yf - i-th fitted value of y N - number of experimental points (yi) m - number of parametrs in model
So, it is not the reduced chi-square as defined in Bevington:
reduced chi-square = chi/DOF = s^2/<sigma(i)^2>
Thus, why should it be close to 1 (as mentioned in Origin documentation)? This is a variance (s^2) so it should be as small as possible.
The reduced chi-square defined as in Bevington should be close to 1 because it is the ratio of estimated variance and the parent variance.
Kind regards, Dominik |
Shirley_GZ |
Posted - 10/17/2018 : 04:54:56 AM Hi Dominik,
For the equation in the page(https://www.originlab.com/doc/Origin-Help/NLFit-Theory#Scale_Error_with_sqrt.28Reduced_Chi-Sqr.29), when the weighting being Instrumental,
![](https://my.originlab.com/ftp/forum_and_kbase/Images/Equation_1.png) Then, it is same to the "general" definition after you plug the RRS to the equation, right?
About the doubt about the value of Reduced Chi-Sqr at the end of your post, please read the description in this FAQ, https://www.originlab.com/doc/Quick-Help/Bad-ReducedChiSqr
Thanks, Shirley OriginLab
Originlab Technical Service Team |
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