Topic 6 (statistics) Flashcards
variable
represented by a symbol (capital letter X,Y,A,B etc) it can take on any of a specified set of values
sample space
another name for the list of all possible outcomes of an experiment is the
random variable
when the value fo the variable is the outcome of an experiment the variable is called a random variable
capital letter like X are used for the random variable
discrete random variable
data you can count i.e there are only certain values
probability/chance
something that can change
-to specify a discrete random variable completely = need to know its set of possible values and the probability with which it takes each one
particular value
small letter such as x for a particular value of the random variable x
probability
probability X is equal to a particular value of x written as P(X=x) or sometimes p(x) (notations are interchangeable)
x = particular value of X and P(X=x) refers to the probability that X is equal to the particular value of x
probability distribution
(you can draw a table to show probability of each outcome of an experiment, this is called a probability distribution
-describes the probability of any outcome in the sample space
probability mass function
probability distribution as a function = probability (mass) function
P(X=2) = 3 x (1/5) x (4/5) squared
X = number of times the coins lands heads in 3 throws
3 = number of combinations nCr
(1/5) probability of tails
(4/5) squared probability of 2 heads
rules of probability
- each probability positive
- sum of all probabilities equal to 1
3
C
2
3 = number of throws 2 = successful outcomes i.e 2 heads
binomial distribution
must satisfy:
- fixed number of trials
- only 2 outcomes (success and failure)
- throws/events are independent
- probability of a success is constant
B(n,p)
B = binomial distribution
n = with n trials
p = probability of success is p
p(X=x)
nCx p(to power of x) (1-p) (to power n-x)
binomial cumulative distribution
- has to be in from x < or equal to ..
- if x> or x> or equal must change to 1 - x< or equal