Chapter 5
Chapter 5
Experiment:
Toss a coin three times.
Observe the number of
heads. The possible
results are: Zero heads,
One head,
Two heads, and
Three heads.
What is the probability
distribution for the
number of heads?
Characteristics of a Probability Distribution
CHARACTERISTICS OF A PROBABILITY
DISTRIBUTION
1.The probability of a particular outcome is between
0 and 1 inclusive.
2. The outcomes are mutually exclusive events.
3. The list is exhaustive. So the sum of the probabilities
of the various events is equal to 1.
Probability Distribution of Number of Heads
Observed in 3 Tosses of a Coin
Random Variables
RANDOM VARIABLE A quantity resulting from an experiment
that, by chance, can assume different values.
Types of Random Variables
DISCRETE RANDOM VARIABLE A random variable that can assume
only certain clearly separated values. It is usually the result of counting
something.
EXAMPLES
1. The number of students in a class.
2. The number of children in a family.
3. The number of cars entering a carwash in a hour.
4. Number of home mortgages approved by Coastal Federal
Bank last week.
Continuous Random Variables
EXAMPLES
n The length of each song on the latest Tim McGraw album.
n The weight of each student in this class.
n The temperature outside as you are reading this book.
n The amount of money earned by each of the more than 750
players currently on Major League Baseball team rosters.
The Mean of a Probability Distribution
MEAN
•The mean is a typical value used to represent the
central location of a probability distribution.
•The mean of a probability distribution is also
referred to as its expected value.
Mean, Variance, and Standard
Deviation of a Probability Distribution - Example
s = s 2 = 1.290 = 1.136
Binomial Probability Distribution
n A Widely occurring discrete probability
distribution
n Characteristics of a Binomial Probability
Distribution
1. There are only two possible outcomes on a
particular trial of an experiment.
2. The outcomes are mutually exclusive,
3. The random variable is the result of counts.
4. Each trial is independent of any other trial
Binomial Probability Experiment
1. An outcome on each trial of an experiment is
classified into one of two mutually exclusive
categories—a success or a failure.
2. The random variable counts the number of successes
in a fixed number of trials.
3. The probability of success and failure stay the same
for each trial.
4. The trials are independent, meaning that the outcome
of one trial does not affect the outcome of any
other trial.
Binomial Probability Formula
Binomial Probability - Example
There are five flights
daily from Pittsburgh
via US Airways into
the Bradford
Regional Airport in
PA. Suppose the
probability that any
flight arrives late is
.20.
What is the
probability that none
of the flights are late
today?
Binomial Dist. – Mean and Variance
Binomial Dist. – Mean and Variance:
Example
For the example
regarding the number
of late flights, recall
that p =.20 and n = 5.