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Re: Q predicting the direction of change due to the change of input

From Rich Ulrich <rich.ulrich@comcast.net>
Newsgroups sci.stat.math
Subject Re: Q predicting the direction of change due to the change of input
Date 2023-07-16 17:16 -0400
Message-ID <jrm8bitos018eunc8g7s9k62tpkhndjvv3@4ax.com> (permalink)
References <870ba5d9-0718-4257-a622-56c6575dce8cn@googlegroups.com>

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On Sun, 16 Jul 2023 01:55:21 -0700 (PDT), Cosine <asecant@gmail.com>
wrote:

>Hi:
>
 >  Given a function, y = f(a, b, c, d, ...) we want to know if the 
direction of the change of a specified input variable would result in 
a particular direction of the change of y. Say, setting the value of a
to be higher than a specified value (a_spec) would result in an 
increase of the output y, and a lower value would result in a lower y.
>
>  How do we setup a test for this purpose?
>

If each of (b, c, d, ...) have only one possible value, then you would
only have to be concerned with the possible values of a and y.  
Graph what you think is conceivable, mark off what is interesting, 
and WHAT TEST should become inevitable. 

Discrete values? specifically a linear relation? only a linear 
relation?  That's a starting point for whatever is realistic for
more realistic data where there are other values of (b, ...).

Are all the values 'designed' or is this largely naturalistic
observation, where you only can/will interfere with a?  Tell us more. 

 - I doubt that anyone else will be more concrete in suggestions
unless you offer specific details. 

-- 
Rich Ulrich 

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Q predicting the direction of change due to the change of input Cosine <asecant@gmail.com> - 2023-07-16 01:55 -0700
  Re: Q predicting the direction of change due to the change of input Rich Ulrich <rich.ulrich@comcast.net> - 2023-07-16 17:16 -0400

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