Vertical distribution of power refers to the allocation of authority and responsibilities across different levels of government within a political system. It typically involves a hierarchical structure where power is divided among central, regional, and local governments. This distribution can vary significantly between federal systems, where power is shared, and unitary systems, where it is concentrated at the national level. The aim is to balance efficiency and representation, allowing for localized governance while maintaining overarching national policies.
Yes. When we refer to the normal distribution, we are referring to a probability distribution. When we specify the equation of a continuous distribution, such as the normal distribution, we refer to the equation as a probability density function.
The statement is true that a sampling distribution is a probability distribution for a statistic.
No, it is the name given to the Gaussian distribution.
The exponential distribution and the Poisson distribution.
the access, distribution, and core layers
From a network design standpoint: Core Distribution Access
provide connectivity between smaller local networks
Distribution
Core, Distribution, and Access.
Hierarchical location-allocation modelling refers to the allocation or the distribution of resources according to the hierarchy. People on the upper level of the chain are usually allocated with most of the resources.
routing between VLANs
contagious diffusion, relocation diffusion, expansion diffusion, stimulus diffusion, hierarchical diffusion.
Just distribution in society, structured by various moral, legal, and cultural rules and principles.
distribution
security policiesquality of serviceLayer 3 functionality
a hierarchical (novanet)