Uncertainty vs Stochastic - What's the difference?
uncertainty | stochastic |
(uncountable) Doubt; the condition of being uncertain or without conviction.
*
, title=(The Celebrity), chapter=4
, passage=“Well,” I answered, at first with uncertainty , then with inspiration, “he would do splendidly to lead your cotillon, if you think of having one.” ¶ “So you do not dance, Mr. Crocker?” ¶ I was somewhat set back by her perspicuity.}}
* {{quote-news, year=2012, date=April 9, author=Mandeep Sanghera, work=BBC Sport
, title= (countable) Something uncertain or ambiguous.
(uncountable, mathematics) A parameter that measures the dispersion of a range of measured values.
Random, randomly determined, relating to stochastics.
* 1970 , , The Atrocity Exhibition :
* 2006 , Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day , Vintage 2007, p. 854:
* NB: This refers to the process of the determination, not necessarily the outcome. Flipping a fair coin that flipped a hundred heads in a row (unlikely to be a random result) could still be considered the product of a stochastic process.
As a noun uncertainty
is (uncountable) doubt; the condition of being uncertain or without conviction.As an adjective stochastic is
random, randomly determined, relating to stochastics.uncertainty
English
Noun
Tottenham 1-2 Norwich, passage=After spending so much of the season looking upwards, the swashbuckling style and swagger of early season Spurs was replaced by uncertainty and frustration against a Norwich side who had the quality and verve to take advantage}}
Antonyms
* certaintyExternal links
* (wikipedia "uncertainty")stochastic
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- In the evening, while she bathed, waiting for him to enter the bathroom as she powdered her body, he crouched over the blueprints spread between the sofas in the lounge, calculating a stochastic analysis of the Pentagon car park.
- Self-slaughter, as Hamlet always says, was certainly in the cards, unless one had been out here long enough to have contemplated the will of God, observed the stochastic whimsy of the day, learned when and when not to whisper “Insh'allah ,” and understood how, as one perhaps might never have in England, to await, to depend upon, the ineluctable departure of what was most dear.