The One Power Bell Curve: Proof that it is not centered on 50% of the strongest channeler's strength
Shannow Send a noteboard - 18/12/2009 08:37:55 AM
I've started a new thread specifically to focus on an analysis of the One Power Bell Curve, which is a point of interest for some.
I happen to be one of those who find it interesting. In any case a massive debate has arisen as to whether the Bell Curve implies that the strongest channeler is only twice as strong as the average channeler. Here I have simple proof that this is not the case:
Firstly, the only reasonably sized channeler sample that we have some in depth knowledge of is the White Tower. This sample consists of 1000 channelers.
Normally you would think that a random sample - if it is large enough - accurately reflects the general population it is drawn from. But in the case of the White Tower, RJ has specifically refuted this, by saying that 37.5% of female channelers are too weak to be tested for the shawl.
That means that the Tower sample exludes the weakest 37.5% of the channeling population. Therefore, the White Tower sample is clearly biased to the stronger side of the general channeling populations's strength range.
In other words, the average Aes Sedai is stronger than the average woman. This makes sense, since the average population's mean strength would be dragged down by the 37.5% of women who are too weak to be included in the Tower. The Tower does not have a similar exclusion on the upper side of the strength scale, which means that it is more heavily weighted in favour of stronger women at the expense of the 37.5% of weaker women.
So the one fact we can take from this is that the average Aes Sedai is stronger than the average Randland woman.
Right.
Now, if the Bell Curve was perfectly proportioned and centered on a strength of 50 (with Lanfear on 100 and the weakest woman on 0), then you would expect the average woman to sit on a strength of 50.
And that would mean that the average woman is exactly half as strong as the strongest possible woman (Lanfear in this case.)
However, if the average woman is placed at 50, then it means that the average Aes Sedai must be higher than 50, based on the the fact that the Tower sample is skewed in favour of stronger women.
And if an average Aes Sedai is higher than 50 (let's for the moment leave out the magnitude of the difference) then a strong Aes Sedai like Moiraine must be even further above 50.
And if that's the case then how strong must Egwene be - who according to Aviendha is stronger than Amys and Melaine combined?
Amys is stated as being equal to Moiriane in strength, and Melaine is stated to be as strong as a strong Aes Sedai.
Both are significantly stronger than the average Aes Sedai, who in turn is stronger than the average woman - who in a symmetrical Bell Curve is supposed to be half as strong as Lanfear.
If that's the case, then Egwene must be significantly stronger than Lanfear, the strongest woman! Clearly, this disproves the notion that the Bell Curve is centered at 50% of the strongest woman's strength.
I have deliberately left estimated strengths for the likes of Egwene, Moiraine and the average Aes Sedai out of this post, as I wanted to prove the concept first. But we have very good evidence for assigning comparative strengths to these various levels as well, should the debate go into that direction.
All I wanted to achieve with this first post is to prove once and for all that the Bell Curve that RJ referred to cannot be a normal distribution centered on the halfway mark between the weakest and strongest woman's strengths. At least, not in absolute terms.
It is far more likely that it is a relative distribution, where the distance from the mean depicts a proportional increase or decrease in strength, rather than an absolute difference in strength.
Based on the above calculation, there really is no way that a symmetrical Bell Curve centered on 50% of the maximum strength and which is based on absolute strength differences can be supported in any way.
I happen to be one of those who find it interesting. In any case a massive debate has arisen as to whether the Bell Curve implies that the strongest channeler is only twice as strong as the average channeler. Here I have simple proof that this is not the case:
Firstly, the only reasonably sized channeler sample that we have some in depth knowledge of is the White Tower. This sample consists of 1000 channelers.
Normally you would think that a random sample - if it is large enough - accurately reflects the general population it is drawn from. But in the case of the White Tower, RJ has specifically refuted this, by saying that 37.5% of female channelers are too weak to be tested for the shawl.
That means that the Tower sample exludes the weakest 37.5% of the channeling population. Therefore, the White Tower sample is clearly biased to the stronger side of the general channeling populations's strength range.
In other words, the average Aes Sedai is stronger than the average woman. This makes sense, since the average population's mean strength would be dragged down by the 37.5% of women who are too weak to be included in the Tower. The Tower does not have a similar exclusion on the upper side of the strength scale, which means that it is more heavily weighted in favour of stronger women at the expense of the 37.5% of weaker women.
So the one fact we can take from this is that the average Aes Sedai is stronger than the average Randland woman.
Right.
Now, if the Bell Curve was perfectly proportioned and centered on a strength of 50 (with Lanfear on 100 and the weakest woman on 0), then you would expect the average woman to sit on a strength of 50.
And that would mean that the average woman is exactly half as strong as the strongest possible woman (Lanfear in this case.)
However, if the average woman is placed at 50, then it means that the average Aes Sedai must be higher than 50, based on the the fact that the Tower sample is skewed in favour of stronger women.
And if an average Aes Sedai is higher than 50 (let's for the moment leave out the magnitude of the difference) then a strong Aes Sedai like Moiraine must be even further above 50.
And if that's the case then how strong must Egwene be - who according to Aviendha is stronger than Amys and Melaine combined?
Amys is stated as being equal to Moiriane in strength, and Melaine is stated to be as strong as a strong Aes Sedai.
Both are significantly stronger than the average Aes Sedai, who in turn is stronger than the average woman - who in a symmetrical Bell Curve is supposed to be half as strong as Lanfear.
If that's the case, then Egwene must be significantly stronger than Lanfear, the strongest woman! Clearly, this disproves the notion that the Bell Curve is centered at 50% of the strongest woman's strength.
I have deliberately left estimated strengths for the likes of Egwene, Moiraine and the average Aes Sedai out of this post, as I wanted to prove the concept first. But we have very good evidence for assigning comparative strengths to these various levels as well, should the debate go into that direction.
All I wanted to achieve with this first post is to prove once and for all that the Bell Curve that RJ referred to cannot be a normal distribution centered on the halfway mark between the weakest and strongest woman's strengths. At least, not in absolute terms.
It is far more likely that it is a relative distribution, where the distance from the mean depicts a proportional increase or decrease in strength, rather than an absolute difference in strength.
Based on the above calculation, there really is no way that a symmetrical Bell Curve centered on 50% of the maximum strength and which is based on absolute strength differences can be supported in any way.
This message last edited by Shannow on 18/12/2009 at 09:15:07 AM
The One Power Bell Curve: Proof that it is not centered on 50% of the strongest channeler's strength
18/12/2009 08:37:55 AM
- 1314 Views
I always thought the curve was one sided
18/12/2009 01:17:32 PM
- 723 Views
The Curve only refers to the channeling population, not to non-channelers.
18/12/2009 01:56:25 PM
- 724 Views
I would say that your sample is flawed.
18/12/2009 05:02:02 PM
- 804 Views
It doesn't matter...
18/12/2009 10:02:38 PM
- 656 Views
But, it sort of does.
18/12/2009 10:43:08 PM
- 705 Views
So you're saying that no modern Aes Sedai are even of average strength?
18/12/2009 10:51:01 PM
- 784 Views
The Tower is restricted to the middle...
18/12/2009 05:35:03 PM
- 870 Views
Two things...
18/12/2009 09:28:25 PM
- 716 Views
The culling theory...
18/12/2009 09:36:34 PM
- 646 Views
The culling theory applies to the ENTIRE population, not just Aes Sedai...
18/12/2009 09:42:31 PM
- 770 Views
Several more things...
18/12/2009 11:26:19 PM
- 815 Views
You don't understand your own model...
18/12/2009 11:38:05 PM
- 823 Views
So RJ was wrong about Bell Curve distribution?
19/12/2009 06:03:24 PM
- 731 Views
So, Aviendha trumps RJ? A woman who, as late as tGS, doesn't know what she's doing with the OP?
19/12/2009 06:12:42 PM
- 711 Views
Age-Related Sample Bias
18/12/2009 06:41:03 PM
- 672 Views
I have no problem with that...but it implies that the average woman today isn't at 50% of Lanfear...
18/12/2009 09:46:00 PM
- 798 Views
Partially agreed...
18/12/2009 10:13:46 PM
- 680 Views
Well, the Aes Sedai are the only group that we have detailed strength info about...
18/12/2009 10:26:48 PM
- 785 Views
Sharina is AS ... she'd be dead in a few years if she hadn't gone to the Tower *NM*
28/12/2009 01:08:20 AM
- 819 Views
A thought that occured to me, and I'd like your opinion...
18/12/2009 07:38:29 PM
- 669 Views
Is it just my bad memory or is one of the wondergirls not a sparker?
18/12/2009 10:12:59 PM
- 661 Views
Easier sulution, and real example.
18/12/2009 10:03:20 PM
- 708 Views
And that is indeed the solution I feel most comfortable with...
18/12/2009 10:08:40 PM
- 684 Views
Re: And that is indeed the solution I feel most comfortable with...
19/12/2009 11:39:31 AM
- 921 Views
Dude, Seriously?
18/12/2009 10:19:25 PM
- 708 Views
Indeed, and that's why I propose that...
18/12/2009 10:31:23 PM
- 687 Views
So RJ used two separate scales, one actual one relative, to explain the same thing?
18/12/2009 11:33:20 PM
- 618 Views
Yes, "Bell Curve" does not mean Gausian. Or normal distribution.
19/12/2009 11:24:10 PM
- 668 Views
I'm sorry, but I've never heard of a non-Gaussian bell curve. Can you prove its existence? *NM*
20/12/2009 03:24:22 AM
- 397 Views
Maybe people in my field just use the term in a non-technical way. We do things with ...
21/12/2009 07:24:43 PM
- 627 Views
That's because outliers in IQ tests are excluded form the curve. *NM*
18/12/2009 11:31:23 PM
- 399 Views
Re: The One Power Bell Curve: Proof that it is not centered on 50% of the strongest channeler's stre
19/12/2009 06:02:34 PM
- 626 Views
Mathmatically this is very close to the system I proposed in another thread
27/12/2009 01:23:51 AM
- 632 Views
Re: The One Power Bell Curve:
27/12/2009 10:05:33 PM
- 775 Views
What makes you think Alviarin is "middling"?
27/12/2009 10:28:13 PM
- 982 Views