I have heard this said by one of my professors, but he is not available for me to ask anymore. But if this is the case then why are there others defined on the wikipedia page, and why do authors refer to higher order moments in papers??
Many thanks.
I have heard this said by one of my professors, but he is not available for me to ask anymore. But if this is the case then why are there others defined on the wikipedia page, and why do authors refer to higher order moments in papers??
Many thanks.
For $X \sim \Gamma(\alpha,\beta)$ you have $E(X)=\frac{\alpha}{\beta}$ and $E(X^2)=\frac{\alpha+\alpha^2}{\beta^2}$.
You can solve these two equations in two unknowns, and recover $\alpha$ and $\beta$.