In
statistics,
truncation results in values that are limited above or below, resulting in a
truncated sample. Truncation is similar to but distinct from the concept of
statistical censoring. A truncated sample can be thought of as being equivalent to an underlying sample with all values outside the bounds entirely omitted, with not even a count of those omitted being kept. With statistical censoring, a note would be recorded documenting which bound (upper or lower) had been exceeded and the value of that bound. With truncated sampling, no note is recorded.