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+ Section 5.1 Randomness, Probability, and Simulation
+ Section 5.1 Randomness, Probability, and Simulation

Discrete Math
Discrete Math

The probability of an event, expressed as P(event), is always a
The probability of an event, expressed as P(event), is always a

Lecture5_SP17_probability_history_solutions
Lecture5_SP17_probability_history_solutions

Elementary Statistics 12e
Elementary Statistics 12e

... get at least one of some specified event. Conditional probability: Find the probability of an event when we have additional information that some other event has already occurred. ...
DepeNDeNt aND INDepeNDeNt eveNts
DepeNDeNt aND INDepeNDeNt eveNts

Probability: History
Probability: History

... • Early Christians: every event, no matter how trivial, was perceived to be a direct manifestation of God’s intervention • St. Augustine (354-430): “We say that those causes that are said to be by chance are not nonexistent but are hidden, and we attribute them to the will of the true God…” ...
SOL 6.16 Probability
SOL 6.16 Probability

Independent Events
Independent Events

Binomial Probabilities
Binomial Probabilities

... (3) Assume that I sample 7 times with replacement from an urn with 2 red ball, 1 white ball and 3 blue balls. What is the probability that I drew the white ball exactly 5 times? Note that all the experiments above have the following three things in common. (1) A same experiment is repeated several t ...
Probability - TeacherWeb
Probability - TeacherWeb

... an event is just as likely to happen as to not happen, then the probability of the event is ½, 0.5 or 50%. ...
Probability
Probability

Probability PowerPoint notes
Probability PowerPoint notes

Probability - WordPress.com
Probability - WordPress.com

Slide 1
Slide 1

... The probability that N persons, possibly including one born on February 29, have all different birthdays is the sum of two probabilities: • That the N persons were born on N different days other than February 29. • That the N persons were born on N different days, and include one person born on Febr ...
PowerPoint
PowerPoint

... other. • With our new notation for conditional probabilities, we can now formalize this definition. • Events A and B are independent whenever P(B|A) = P(B). (Equivalently, events A and B are independent whenever P(A|B) = P(A).) ...
Bayes` Rule
Bayes` Rule

Probability - Mrs A`s Weebly
Probability - Mrs A`s Weebly

Problem Set and Review Questions 3 Consider the following four
Problem Set and Review Questions 3 Consider the following four

Chapter 14: From Randomness to Probability
Chapter 14: From Randomness to Probability

distributions
distributions

... n. In the Standard Normal Table search for the cumulative probability most near 0.75. You’re looking “inside” the table where the probabilities are for the value closest to 0.7500. What is the z-score with this cumulative probability? ...
Binomial Distributions on the ClassPad
Binomial Distributions on the ClassPad

... attempts 17 free throw shots and misses 7 of the 17. All of her free throw shots are independent and the probability that she makes a single free throw is 0.70. What is the probability that she will miss exactly 7 free throws in a game? What is the probability that she will miss 7 or more free throw ...
Probability - East Penn School District
Probability - East Penn School District

3.3 Homework Assignment 3 - Mr-Kuijpers-Math
3.3 Homework Assignment 3 - Mr-Kuijpers-Math

Green Jawbreaker - lenny-prob
Green Jawbreaker - lenny-prob

< 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 >

Boy or Girl paradox

The Boy or Girl paradox surrounds a set of questions in probability theory which are also known as The Two Child Problem, Mr. Smith's Children and the Mrs. Smith Problem. The initial formulation of the question dates back to at least 1959, when Martin Gardner published one of the earliest variants of the paradox in Scientific American. Titled The Two Children Problem, he phrased the paradox as follows:Mr. Jones has two children. The older child is a girl. What is the probability that both children are girls?Mr. Smith has two children. At least one of them is a boy. What is the probability that both children are boys?Gardner initially gave the answers 1/2 and 1/3, respectively; but later acknowledged that the second question was ambiguous. Its answer could be 1/2, depending on how you found out that one child was a boy. The ambiguity, depending on the exact wording and possible assumptions, was confirmed by Bar-Hillel and Falk, and Nickerson.Other variants of this question, with varying degrees of ambiguity, have been recently popularized by Ask Marilyn in Parade Magazine, John Tierney of The New York Times, and Leonard Mlodinow in Drunkard's Walk. One scientific study showed that when identical information was conveyed, but with different partially ambiguous wordings that emphasized different points, that the percentage of MBA students who answered 1/2 changed from 85% to 39%.The paradox has frequently stimulated a great deal of controversy. Many people argued strongly for both sides with a great deal of confidence, sometimes showing disdain for those who took the opposing view. The paradox stems from whether the problem setup is similar for the two questions. The intuitive answer is 1/2. This answer is intuitive if the question leads the reader to believe that there are two equally likely possibilities for the sex of the second child (i.e., boy and girl), and that the probability of these outcomes is absolute, not conditional.
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