The Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC), and the Deviance Information Criterion (DIC) are perhaps the most widely-used information criteria (IC) in model building and selection. A fourth, Minimum Description Length (MDL), is closely related to the BIC. In a nutshell, they provide guidance as which alternative model provides the most "bang for buck," i.e., the best fit after penalizing for model complexity. Penalizing for complexity is important since, given candidate models of similar predictive or explanatory power, the simplest model is most likely to be the best choice. In line with Occam's razor, complex models sometimes perform poorly on data not used in the model building. There are several others, including AIC3, SABIC, and CAIC, and no clear consensus among authorities as far as I am aware as to which is "best" overall. IC will not necessarily agree on which model should be chosen. Cross-validation, Predicted Residual Error Sum of Squares (PRESS) statistic, a kind of cross-validation, and Mallows’ Cp are also used instead of IC. Information criteria are covered in varying levels in detail in most statistics textbooks and are the subject of numerous academic papers. I know of no single go-to source on this topic.
The Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC), and the Deviance Information Criterion (DIC) are perhaps the most widely-used information criteria (IC) in model building and selection. A fourth, Minimum Description Length (MDL), is closely related to the BIC. In a nutshell, they provide guidance as which alternative model provides the most "bang for buck," i.e., the best fit after penalizing for model complexity. Penalizing for complexity is important since, given candidate models of similar predictive or explanatory power, the simplest model is most likely to be the best choice. In line with Occam's razor, complex models sometimes perform poorly on data not used in the model building. There are several others, including AIC3, SABIC, and CAIC, and no clear consensus among authorities as far as I am aware as to which is "best" overall. IC will not necessarily agree on which model should be chosen. Cross-validation, Predicted Residual Error Sum of Squares (PRESS) statistic, a kind of cross-validation, and Mallows’ Cp are also used instead of IC. Information criteria are covered in varying levels in detail in most statistics textbooks and are the subject of numerous academic papers. I know of no single go-to source on this topic.
Start with a fresh view of investing strategy. The combination of risks and fads this quarter looks to be topping. That means the future is ready to move in.Likely, there will not be a wholesale shift. Company actions will aim to benefit from economic growth, inflationary pressures and a return of market-determined interest rates. In turn, all of that should drive the stock market and investment returns higher.
Export WhatsApp stickers to Telegram on iPhone
You can’t. What you can do, though, is use WhatsApp’s and Telegram’s web platforms to transfer stickers. It’s easy, but might take a while.Open WhatsApp in your browser, find a sticker you like in a chat, and right-click on it to save it as an image. The file won’t be a picture, though—it’s a webpage and will have a .webp extension. Don’t be scared, this is the way. Repeat this step to save as many stickers as you want.Then, open Telegram in your browser and go into your Saved messages chat. Just as you’d share a file with a friend, click the Share file button on the bottom left of the chat window (it looks like a dog-eared paper), and select the .webp files you downloaded. Click Open and you’ll see your stickers in your Saved messages chat. This is now your sticker depository. To use them, forward them as you would a message from one chat to the other: by clicking or long-pressing on the sticker, and then choosing Forward.