Definition:
fart is the conditional probability
for an incorrect positive decision given that
the condition is FALSE:
fart = p(decision = positive | condition = FALSE)
or the probability of a false alarm.
Perspective:
fart further classifies
the subset of cond_false individuals
by decision (fart = fa/cond_false).
Alternative names:
false positive rate (FPR),
rate of type-I errors (alpha),
statistical significance level,
fallout
Relationships:
a. fart is the complement of the
specificity spec:
fart = 1 - spec
b. fart is the opposite conditional probability
-- but not the complement --
of the false discovery rate
or false detection rate FDR:
FDR = p(condition = FALSE | decision = positive)
In terms of frequencies,
fart is the ratio of
fa divided by cond_false
(i.e., fa + cr):
fart = fa/cond_false = fa/(fa + cr)
Dependencies:
fart is a feature of a decision process
or diagnostic procedure and a measure of
incorrect decisions (false positives).
However, due to being a conditional probability,
the value of fart is not intrinsic to
the decision process, but also depends on the
condition's prevalence value prev.