See also: prédictive

English edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Latin praedictivus, from praedico. Equivalent to predict +‎ -ive.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

predictive (comparative more predictive, superlative most predictive)

  1. Useful in predicting.
    The amount of rain in April is predictive of the number of mosquitoes in May.
  2. (computing) Describing a predictor.
  3. (medicine) Expressing the expected accuracy of a statistical measure or of a diagnostic test.

Antonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Translations edit

Noun edit

predictive (plural predictives)

  1. (grammar) A conditional statement that includes a prediction in the dependent clause (e.g. "if it rains, the game will be cancelled", "give her an inch and she'll take a mile.").
    • 1999, Barbara Dancygier, Conditionals and Prediction: Time, Knowledge and Causation in Conditional Constructions, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, published 2004, →ISBN, page 76:
      Also, as we have seen in the preceding chapter, predictive conditionals show a high degree of integration thanks to the patterns of verb forms which are characteristic for predictives and which normally do not mix freely with other, non-predictive forms.
    • 2008, Virginia C. Mueller Gathercole, Routes to Language: Studies in Honor of Melissa Bowerman, page xiv:
      In contrast, English-speaking children appropriately differentiate if future predictives from when future predictives, a distinction relevant for English but not for, say, German.
  2. (statistics) Simulated data generated from a statistical model, based on the estimates for the real data.
    • 2008, Siddhartha Chib, William Griffiths, Bayesian Econometrics, page 160:
      However, the posterior predictives combine two sources of information: what we might term the structural effect of WIC participation as well as an unobserved correlation between the errors of the participation and outcome equations.
    • 2018, Simon Farrell, Stephan Lewandowsky, Computational Modeling of Cognition and Behavior, page 308:
      Alternatively, we can use prior predictives to help define prior distributions.