
Stat 281 Chapter 3 F..
... P(A) is based on knowledge (or assumptions) of the fundamental properties of the experiment. Subjective Probability is based on someone’s opinion and/or experience. It is usually just a guess and subject to bias. ...
... P(A) is based on knowledge (or assumptions) of the fundamental properties of the experiment. Subjective Probability is based on someone’s opinion and/or experience. It is usually just a guess and subject to bias. ...
Chapter 5
... to trial. Also the probability a getting a success on the second trial depend on the results of the first trial. This means the trials are not independent so Condition 4 is violated. There is a probability distribution which can describe sampling without replacement, the hypergeometric distribution. ...
... to trial. Also the probability a getting a success on the second trial depend on the results of the first trial. This means the trials are not independent so Condition 4 is violated. There is a probability distribution which can describe sampling without replacement, the hypergeometric distribution. ...
Using Venn Diagrams to Solve Probability Problems
... 3. The Sample Space. This is the rectangular area that surrounds all the events. This represents the “extra” probabilities that may not be part of the events or their intersections, but are still part of the problem to be solved. In the case of the events taking up all the probabilities, a rectangul ...
... 3. The Sample Space. This is the rectangular area that surrounds all the events. This represents the “extra” probabilities that may not be part of the events or their intersections, but are still part of the problem to be solved. In the case of the events taking up all the probabilities, a rectangul ...
P values and statistical practice
... use one-sided P values as bounds on posterior probabilities (a result they trace back to Casella and Berger).11 The general problem I have with noninformatively derived Bayesian probabilities is that they tend to be too strong. At first, this may sound paradoxical, that a noninformative or weakly in ...
... use one-sided P values as bounds on posterior probabilities (a result they trace back to Casella and Berger).11 The general problem I have with noninformatively derived Bayesian probabilities is that they tend to be too strong. At first, this may sound paradoxical, that a noninformative or weakly in ...
Probability Fancy a Flutter
... that the actual experimental results are unlikely to be identical to this. • Recognise that their results may well differ from their neighbour’s due to the variability and independence of samples. ...
... that the actual experimental results are unlikely to be identical to this. • Recognise that their results may well differ from their neighbour’s due to the variability and independence of samples. ...