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All_Diff_ex_Feb29 (N-1) - University of Cincinnati
All_Diff_ex_Feb29 (N-1) - University of Cincinnati

... Birthdays, Leap Years, and Blind Counting Using Probabilities to Build Estimates Suppose you are throwing a surprise party for your friends. However, it is essential that no two people at the party share a birthday. How many people can you invite and still be confident that this happens. Interesting ...
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What is probability?

... Let p(I) denote the probability of the winning of the I_th horse  If I lose, I will lose – (1-p(I)) in the long run  If I win, I will win p(I) * (M(I) – 1) in the long run  What will happen if p(I) = B(I) / B ? ...
Review Day Slides
Review Day Slides

... a rainy day is .75. Today the weather station announced that there is a 20% chance of rain. What is the probability that it will rain today and that a car will skid on the bridge? 3) The probability that Ted will enroll in an English class in 1/3. If he does enroll in an English class, the probabili ...
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... First, the term is "disjoint", not "disjointed". There are no such things as disjoint probabilities, but there are disjoint events. Two events are disjoint if they both cannot happen at once. If you toss three coins, and if A is the event of getting 2 heads and B is the event of getting 2 tails, the ...
1 - WorkBank247.com
1 - WorkBank247.com

... a. Generate at least 1000 random samples (you can generate more if you wish), each with 4 observations, from a binomial random variable y where p=0.2 (the probability of a success), and n=10 trials. That is, the random variable y represents the number of successes in 10 trials, where the probability ...
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... 2. (a) The probabilities of getting a fruit for each of them are: Smartie: 36/200; Biggie:49/200;Wily:115/200. (b) Expected number of fruits: Smartie:72; Biggie:98;Wily:230. 3. (a) The number of possible outcomes for drawing two green balls = 9; (b) Total number of possible outcomes = 100; (c) Proba ...
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... 1. In each part, indicate, (1) whether the variable is discrete or continuous AND (2) whether it is binomial or not AND (3) if it is binomial, give values for n and p. a. Number of times a “head” comes up in 10 flips of a coin 1. Discrete or continuous 2. Binomial yes or no 3. If Binomial what is n ...
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... 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( ...
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... 1) The table shows the number of short-term visitors coming to Australia in the period April – June 2011, and the main reason for their visit. a) Find the probability that a person who visited in June was on holiday. b) Find the probability that a person ...
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HW Day #13 Answers

... “By contrast, 253 people are needed in order for the probability to be 1/2 that one of them has a specific birth date, say July 4.” ...
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Midterm 1 practice

Section 6.2 ~ Basics of Probability Objective: After this section you
Section 6.2 ~ Basics of Probability Objective: After this section you

< 1 ... 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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