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We introduce $k$-variance, a generalization of variance built on the machinery of random bipartite matchings. $K$-variance measures the expected cost of matching two sets of $k$ samples from a distribution to each other, capturing local rather than g lobal information about a measure as $k$ increases; it is easily approximated stochastically using sampling and linear programming. In addition to defining $k$-variance and proving its basic properties, we provide in-depth analysis of this quantity in several key cases, including one-dimensional measures, clustered measures, and measures concentrated on low-dimensional subsets of $mathbb R^n$. We conclude with experiments and open problems motivated by this new way to summarize distributional shape.
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