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Chapter 6 Probability.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6 Probability."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6 Probability

2 Inferential Statistics
Samples - so far we have been concerned about describing and summarizing samples or subsets of a population Inferential stats allows us to “go beyond” our sample and make educated guesses about the population

3 Inferential Statistics
But, we need some help which comes from Probability theory Inferential = Descriptive + Probability Statistics Statistics Theory

4 What is probability theory and what is its role?
Probability theory, or better “probability theories” are found in mathematics and are interested in questions about unpredictable events Although there is no universal agreement about what probability is, probability helps us with the possible outcomes of random sampling from populations

5 Examples “The Chance of Rain”
The odds of rolling a five at the craps table (or winning at black jack) The chance that a radioactive mass will emit a particle The probability that a coin will come up heads upon flipping it* The probability of getting exactly 2 heads out of 3 flips of a coin* The probability of getting 2 or more heads out of 3 flips*

6 Set Theory (a brief digression)
Experiment - an act which leads to an unpredictable, but measurable outcome Set - a collection of outcomes Event - one possible outcome; a value of a variable being measured Simple probability – the likelihood that an event occurs in a single random observation

7 Simple Probabilities To compute a simple probability (read the probability of some event), p(event):

8 Probability Theory Most of us understand probability in terms of a relative frequency measure (remember this, f/n), the frequency of occurrences (f) divided by the total number of trials or observations (n) However, probability theories are about the properties of probability not whether they are true or not (the determination of a probability can come from a variety of sources)

9 Example 100 marbles are Placed in a jar

10 Relative Frequency (a reminder)
What if we counted all of the marbles in the jar and constructed a frequency distribution? We find 50 black marbles, 25 red marbles, and 5 white marbles Relative frequency (proportion) seems like probability Color f rf Black Red White Total

11 Relative Frequency and Probability Distributions
A graphical representation of a relative frequency distribution is also similar to a “Probability Distribution”

12 What does this mean? What will happen if we choose a single marble out of the jar? If we chose 100 marbles from the jar, tallied the color, and replaced them, will we get 50, 25, and 25? If so, what if we selected only 99? If .5, .25, and .25 are the “real” probabilities, then “in the long run” will should get relative proportions that are close to .5, .25, and .25

13 Bernoulli’s Theorem The notion of “in the long run” is attributed to Bernoulli It is also known as the “law of large numbers” as the number of times an experiment is performed approaches infinity (becomes large), the “true” probability of any outcome equals the relative proportion

14 Venn Diagrams S A

15 Venn Diagrams S “all the marbles” A “Red” “not red”

16 Mutually Exclusive Events
B S

17 Mutually Exclusive Events

18 Axiom’s of Probability
1. The probability of any event A, denoted p(A), is 0 < p(A) < 1 2. The probability of S, or of an event in sample space S is 1 3. If there is a sequence of mutually exclusive events (B1, B2, B3, etc.) and C represents the event “at least one of the Bi’s occurs, then the probability of C is the sum of the probabilities of the Bis (p(C) = Σ p(Bi)

19 1. 0 < p(A) < 1 (in Venn diagrams)
The probability of event A is between 0 and 1

20 2. p(S) = 1 A The probability of AN event, in S, occurring is 1 S

21 3. p(C) = Σp(Bi) B1 B3 B4 B2 B5 S C If the events B1, B2, B3, etc. are mutually exclusive, the probability of one of the Bs occurring is C, the sum of the Bs

22 Mutually Exclusive Events
If A and B are mutually exclusive, meaning that an event of type A precludes event B from occurring, by the 3rd axiom of probability

23 Mutually Exclusive Events
If A and B are mutually exclusive, and set A and set B are not null sets,

24 Joint Events If the events are independent, (not mutually exclusive), meaning that the occurrence of one does not affect the occurrence of the other, the intersection

25 Joint Events - Example What is the probability of selecting a black marble and white marble in two successive selections? Since each selection is independent, then p(Black, White) = .5 • .25 = .125

26 Generalization from Joint Events
If A, B, C, and D are independent events, then: What is the probability of selecting a white marble, then red, then white, then black?

27 What if the events are not independent?
Conditional probability - the occurrence of one event is influenced by another event “Conditional Probability” refers to the probability of one event under the condition that the other event is known to have occurred p(A | B) - read “the probability of A given that B has occurred”

28 Probability Theory and Hypothesis Testing
A man comes up to you on the street and says that he has a “special” quarter that, when flipped, comes up heads more often than tails He says you can buy it from him for $1 You say that you want to test the coin before you buy it He says “OK”, but you can only flip it 5 times

29 Probability Theory Example
How many heads would convince you that it was a “special” coin? 3?, 4?, 5? How “sure” do you want to be that it is a “special” coin? What is the chance that he is fooling you and selling a “regular” quarter?

30 2 Hypotheses The coin is not biased, it’s a normal quarter that you can get at any bank The likelihood of getting a heads on a single flip is 1/2, or .5 The coin is a special The probability of getting a heads on a single flip is greater than .5

31 Hypothesis Testing Let’s assume that it is a regular, old quarter
p = .5 (the probability of getting a heads on a SINGLE toss is .5) We flip the coin and get 4 heads. What is the probability of this result, assuming the coin is fair? Note that this is a problem involving conditional probability : p(4/5 heads|coin is fair)

32 How do I solve this problem?
Any Ideas? You might think that, using the rule of Joint events, that: NO!

33 Why not? You have just calculated the probability of getting exactly H, H, H, H on four flips of our coin. What is the probability of getting H, T, H, T on 4 flips? Exactly the same as H, H, H, H…any single combination of 4 H and T are equally likely in this scenario. Here they are:

34 All Possibilities: 4 flips of a coin
HHTT HTHT TTTH HTTH HHHT TTHT TTHH HHTH THTT THTH HTHH TTTT HTTT THHT THHH HHHH 0 Heads 1 heads heads heads heads f =

35 Relative Frequency Dist
Heads f p 1 .0625 4 .25 2 6 .375 3 Total 16 1.00

36 YES! Relative frequency and Probability are related by Bernoulli’s theorem If I did this test again, would I get the same result? (probably not) If I did it over and over again, what results would we expect given a non-biased coin? How many combinations?

37 What if I figured out the total number of possible outcomes of this experiment, and I figured out the total number of outcomes that had 4/5 heads? Prob of 4/5 = Freq of 4/5 Total N of outcomes How many outcomes?

38 Lots H, H, T, T, T T, H, T, H, T H, T, H, T, H ETC. ETC. ETC.

39 How many 4 out of 5? 5 flips (exactly) 4 heads
1 possibility – H, H, H, H, T Another – H, H, H, T, H More – H, H, T, H, H And – H, T, H, H, H Lastly – T, H, H, H, H

40 5 Flips: All possibilities
HHTTT TTHHH HTTHT THHTH HTHTT THTHH THHTT HTTHH THTHT HTHTH HTTTT TTHHT HHTTH THHHH THTTT HTTTH THHHT HTHHH TTHTT THTTH HTHHT HHTHH TTTHT TTHTH HHTHT HHHTH TTTTT TTTTH TTTHH HHHTT HHHHT HHHHH 0 heads 1 head 2 heads 3 heads 4 heads 5 heads p =

41 At least 4 heads out of 5 Given a Fair Coin:
Getting at least 4 heads out of 5 flips is p(4) + p(5) = .1875 There is a 18.75% chance that, upon flipping a FAIR coin 5 times, you will get at least 4 heads. B1 B5 C B4 B2 B3

42 You gonna buy that quarter?
What if this guy let you flip this quarter 100 times? How many times do you want to flip it? (the more the better, yes? In the long run???)


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