
Teacher Page Probability / Day # 7 Probability
... What is the experimental probability that a video player chosen at random has no defects? Express your answer as a percent. a. 99.5% b. 0.25% c. 99.75% d. 97.5% 7. An experiment consists of rolling a number cube. Find the theoretical probability of rolling a number less than or equal to 5. Express y ...
... What is the experimental probability that a video player chosen at random has no defects? Express your answer as a percent. a. 99.5% b. 0.25% c. 99.75% d. 97.5% 7. An experiment consists of rolling a number cube. Find the theoretical probability of rolling a number less than or equal to 5. Express y ...
D6 Probability
... To work out the probability of throwing a six on a die, it is not necessary to do an experiment. The uniform properties of the cube provide us with enough information to calculate that it is 61 . This is called the theoretical probability. The theoretical probability of getting a six on a fair die i ...
... To work out the probability of throwing a six on a die, it is not necessary to do an experiment. The uniform properties of the cube provide us with enough information to calculate that it is 61 . This is called the theoretical probability. The theoretical probability of getting a six on a fair die i ...
Conditional Probability
... (point out that the weather today might be an indicator of the weather this weekend . For example, if it is gloomy/rainy it might be more likely to rain this weekend than if there hasn’t been a cloud in weeks) ...
... (point out that the weather today might be an indicator of the weather this weekend . For example, if it is gloomy/rainy it might be more likely to rain this weekend than if there hasn’t been a cloud in weeks) ...
cheneyslides
... related to a realistic programming system. For appropriate domains, we should be able to prove all the results of classical probability theory. The constructors and operations from the programming model allow us to relate probability distributions and random values. And there are decision procedures ...
... related to a realistic programming system. For appropriate domains, we should be able to prove all the results of classical probability theory. The constructors and operations from the programming model allow us to relate probability distributions and random values. And there are decision procedures ...
ap statistics
... Safety officials hope a public information campaign will increase the use of seatbelts above the current 70% level. Their efforts include running radio and TV ads, putting up billboards, having police officers appear on talk shows, and getting newspapers to indicate whether people injured in acciden ...
... Safety officials hope a public information campaign will increase the use of seatbelts above the current 70% level. Their efforts include running radio and TV ads, putting up billboards, having police officers appear on talk shows, and getting newspapers to indicate whether people injured in acciden ...
1.2 Discrete Probability Distributions
... Determination of Probabilities It is important to consider ways in which probability distributions are determined in practice. One way is by symmetry. For the case of the toss of a coin, we do not see any physical difference between the two sides of a coin that should affect the chance of one side o ...
... Determination of Probabilities It is important to consider ways in which probability distributions are determined in practice. One way is by symmetry. For the case of the toss of a coin, we do not see any physical difference between the two sides of a coin that should affect the chance of one side o ...
Title: Proportions
... overnight. That’s an unlikely event. Is it certain that the sun will rise tomorrow? This is probably a certain statement as the sun rises each day even when we don’t see it. How about an impossible event? The temperature outside today will be 150 degrees. It’s probably impossible because that temper ...
... overnight. That’s an unlikely event. Is it certain that the sun will rise tomorrow? This is probably a certain statement as the sun rises each day even when we don’t see it. How about an impossible event? The temperature outside today will be 150 degrees. It’s probably impossible because that temper ...
stats 1 - Ch 4 - 1 - random variables
... A customer wishes to withdraw money from a cash machine. To do this it is necessary to type a PIN number into the machine. The customer is unsure of this number. If the wrong number is typed in, the customer can try again up to a maximum of four attempts in total. Attempts to type in the correct num ...
... A customer wishes to withdraw money from a cash machine. To do this it is necessary to type a PIN number into the machine. The customer is unsure of this number. If the wrong number is typed in, the customer can try again up to a maximum of four attempts in total. Attempts to type in the correct num ...
Probability interpretations

The word probability has been used in a variety of ways since it was first applied to the mathematical study of games of chance. Does probability measure the real, physical tendency of something to occur or is it a measure of how strongly one believes it will occur, or does it draw on both these elements? In answering such questions, mathematicians interpret the probability values of probability theory.There are two broad categories of probability interpretations which can be called ""physical"" and ""evidential"" probabilities. Physical probabilities, which are also called objective or frequency probabilities, are associated with random physical systems such as roulette wheels, rolling dice and radioactive atoms. In such systems, a given type of event (such as the dice yielding a six) tends to occur at a persistent rate, or ""relative frequency"", in a long run of trials. Physical probabilities either explain, or are invoked to explain, these stable frequencies. Thus talking about physical probability makes sense only when dealing with well defined random experiments. The two main kinds of theory of physical probability are frequentist accounts (such as those of Venn, Reichenbach and von Mises) and propensity accounts (such as those of Popper, Miller, Giere and Fetzer).Evidential probability, also called Bayesian probability (or subjectivist probability), can be assigned to any statement whatsoever, even when no random process is involved, as a way to represent its subjective plausibility, or the degree to which the statement is supported by the available evidence. On most accounts, evidential probabilities are considered to be degrees of belief, defined in terms of dispositions to gamble at certain odds. The four main evidential interpretations are the classical (e.g. Laplace's) interpretation, the subjective interpretation (de Finetti and Savage), the epistemic or inductive interpretation (Ramsey, Cox) and the logical interpretation (Keynes and Carnap).Some interpretations of probability are associated with approaches to statistical inference, including theories of estimation and hypothesis testing. The physical interpretation, for example, is taken by followers of ""frequentist"" statistical methods, such as R. A. Fisher, Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson. Statisticians of the opposing Bayesian school typically accept the existence and importance of physical probabilities, but also consider the calculation of evidential probabilities to be both valid and necessary in statistics. This article, however, focuses on the interpretations of probability rather than theories of statistical inference.The terminology of this topic is rather confusing, in part because probabilities are studied within a variety of academic fields. The word ""frequentist"" is especially tricky. To philosophers it refers to a particular theory of physical probability, one that has more or less been abandoned. To scientists, on the other hand, ""frequentist probability"" is just another name for physical (or objective) probability. Those who promote Bayesian inference view ""frequentist statistics"" as an approach to statistical inference that recognises only physical probabilities. Also the word ""objective"", as applied to probability, sometimes means exactly what ""physical"" means here, but is also used of evidential probabilities that are fixed by rational constraints, such as logical and epistemic probabilities.It is unanimously agreed that statistics depends somehow on probability. But, as to what probability is and how it is connected with statistics, there has seldom been such complete disagreement and breakdown of communication since the Tower of Babel. Doubtless, much of the disagreement is merely terminological and would disappear under sufficiently sharp analysis.