
5-2B Lecture
... Conclusion: if you survey 60 American boys age 13 to 19 about video game playing there is a 29 % chance that more than 57 of them will say they have played a video game. Note: If you had rounded each P(x) and then added the values you would have still gotten the same answer of P(x > 57) = P(58) + P( ...
... Conclusion: if you survey 60 American boys age 13 to 19 about video game playing there is a 29 % chance that more than 57 of them will say they have played a video game. Note: If you had rounded each P(x) and then added the values you would have still gotten the same answer of P(x > 57) = P(58) + P( ...
ACTSSOLHW9
... SOLUTION FOR HOMEWORK 9, ACTS 4306 Welcome to your 9th homework. The main task of this homework is to recognize an underlying distribution and then solve the problem as fast as possible using known facts about the distribution. I will use notation of the text. 1. Solution: First of all, look how qui ...
... SOLUTION FOR HOMEWORK 9, ACTS 4306 Welcome to your 9th homework. The main task of this homework is to recognize an underlying distribution and then solve the problem as fast as possible using known facts about the distribution. I will use notation of the text. 1. Solution: First of all, look how qui ...
Solutions for Sample Questions (Mid-term) (For question# 2
... 14. (10 points) How does the synchronization work in 802.11 infrastructure mode and ad-hoc mode, respectively? ...
... 14. (10 points) How does the synchronization work in 802.11 infrastructure mode and ad-hoc mode, respectively? ...
REALISTIC SYNTHETIC DATA FOR TESTING ASSOCIATION RULE
... have studied the theoretical performances of some ARM algorithms, however, a study of the structural properties of the databases generated by QUEST has never been attempted before). The final contribution of this paper is a proposal for an alternative synthetic data generator and a complete mathemat ...
... have studied the theoretical performances of some ARM algorithms, however, a study of the structural properties of the databases generated by QUEST has never been attempted before). The final contribution of this paper is a proposal for an alternative synthetic data generator and a complete mathemat ...
Chapter 5.1 to 5.2
... either a finite number of values or countable number of values, where “countable” refers to the fact that there might be infinitely many values, but they result from a counting process Continuous random variable infinitely many values, and those values can be associated with measurements on a cont ...
... either a finite number of values or countable number of values, where “countable” refers to the fact that there might be infinitely many values, but they result from a counting process Continuous random variable infinitely many values, and those values can be associated with measurements on a cont ...
Probability of Compound Events
... turkey, or ham, and either chips, a brownie, or fruit. Use a tree diagram to determine the number of possible sandwich combinations. ...
... turkey, or ham, and either chips, a brownie, or fruit. Use a tree diagram to determine the number of possible sandwich combinations. ...
Student sheets Word
... Suppose you want to find the probability of a drawing pin landing point up when you toss it up in the air. To estimate the probability you could carry out an experiment to find in what fraction of the trials the drawing pin lands point up. This fraction, called the relative frequency, gives an estim ...
... Suppose you want to find the probability of a drawing pin landing point up when you toss it up in the air. To estimate the probability you could carry out an experiment to find in what fraction of the trials the drawing pin lands point up. This fraction, called the relative frequency, gives an estim ...
Lecture 1: simple random walk in 1-d Today let`s talk about ordinary
... Lecture 1: simple random walk in 1-d Today let’s talk about ordinary simple random walk to introduce ourselves to some of the questions. Starting in d = 1, Definition 0.1. Let Y1 , . . . be a sequence of i.i.d. random variables defined on some probability space (Ω, F, P) with P(Y1 = 1) = 1/2 = P(Y1 ...
... Lecture 1: simple random walk in 1-d Today let’s talk about ordinary simple random walk to introduce ourselves to some of the questions. Starting in d = 1, Definition 0.1. Let Y1 , . . . be a sequence of i.i.d. random variables defined on some probability space (Ω, F, P) with P(Y1 = 1) = 1/2 = P(Y1 ...
Probability box
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A probability box (or p-box) is a characterization of an uncertain number consisting of both aleatoric and epistemic uncertainties that is often used in risk analysis or quantitative uncertainty modeling where numerical calculations must be performed. Probability bounds analysis is used to make arithmetic and logical calculations with p-boxes.An example p-box is shown in the figure at right for an uncertain number x consisting of a left (upper) bound and a right (lower) bound on the probability distribution for x. The bounds are coincident for values of x below 0 and above 24. The bounds may have almost any shapes, including step functions, so long as they are monotonically increasing and do not cross each other. A p-box is used to express simultaneously incertitude (epistemic uncertainty), which is represented by the breadth between the left and right edges of the p-box, and variability (aleatory uncertainty), which is represented by the overall slant of the p-box.