1 / 25

Probability

Probability . Math 374. Game Plan. General Models Tree Diagram Matrix Two Dimensional Model Balanced Unbalanced Odds – for – odds against. What is Probability. It is a number we assign to show the likelihood of an event occurring We set the following limits

Download Presentation

Probability

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Probability Math 374

  2. Game Plan • General • Models • Tree Diagram • Matrix Two Dimensional Model • Balanced • Unbalanced • Odds – for – odds against

  3. What is Probability • It is a number we assign to show the likelihood of an event occurring • We set the following limits • What is the probability that if I drop the piece of chalk it will fall to the floor? • P (fall) = 1 a certainly

  4. Probability • What is the probability that the chalk will float up to the ceiling? • P (float) = 0 an impossibility

  5. Probability Scale • We have created a scale 0 Absolute Impossibility 1 Absolute Certainty

  6. Various Types of Probability • Subjective – gets you in trouble • Probability – (Canadiens will will Stanley Cup) • Experimental – you need to do an experiment • Probability (cars on an assembly line have a bad headlight). You would probably test 20 cars. If 1 was faulty you would say 1/20 are bad 0 1 0.8 (A fan) 0.1 A leafs fan

  7. Various Types of Probability • Theoretical – the one we will use • Fundamental Definition • P = S R where s # of successes R # of possibilities

  8. Examples • Consider flip a coin, what is the probability of getting a tail • S = (T) = 1 • R = (H, T) = 2 • P = ½

  9. Examples • Roll a die, get a 5 • S = (5) = 1 • R = (1,2,3,4,5,6) = 6 • P = 1/6 • Roll a die, get more than 2 • S = (3,4,5,6) • R = 6 • P = 4/6 (you do not need to reduce in this chapter!)

  10. Models • The key to understanding probability is to have a model that shows you the possibilities • This can get daunting, there are 311 875 200 possible poker hands from a standard deck. • The easiest model we will use is a tree • Tree Model - Flipping two coins H H T Starting Point H T T

  11. We need to Determine R • In a balanced model just count the number of end branches i.e. 4 to determine denominator • OR 2) R = # of possibilities of first. # of possibilities of second. # of possibilities of third. 2 x 2 = 4 • Using the model P (getting two tails) • S  How many branches from start to the end satisfy? • Let’s look at the various types of models

  12. Tree Model H H Starting Point T H T T S = ? S = 1 Notice # of branches will be the denominator P = ? P = ¼ Look at the # of successes for numerator

  13. Matrix Two Dimensional Model Die #1 • Rolling Two Die or Dice • Not a tree • Called a matrix – two dimensional • Eg P (getting a total 5) • S = 4 • P = 4/36 • Roll over 3 • Do not include 3 • P = 33/36 Die #2

  14. Balanced Model • Consider a bag with 2 blue marbles and 3 red marbles. You are going to pick two and replace them. • Replace = put them back • What is the prob of getting a blue & red?

  15. Balanced Model B P (blue & Red)? B # of successes? B R R Starting Point B 12 B Put check marks! R B R # of Possibilities? R R B B R R R R R B B R R = 25 R R R B B P = 12/25 R R R

  16. Unbalanced Model • It is not always possible to write out every single branch. Consider the same question; • What is the P of getting a blue and a red? • This time we create an unbalanced model To find den. ADD branches and MULT each one. (It differs if you have 3 options). 2 S? B 3 (2x3)+(3x2) 2 B R 2 Starting Point 3 B R? R R=5x5 3 R P=12/25

  17. Unbalanced Model • Create a model given a bag with 20 blue, 15 green and 15 red marbles. You are picking three marbles and replacing them. • What is the probability of getting three green? • Draw the model! • S = ? • 15 x 15 x 15 • R = ? • 50 x 50 x 50 • P = 3375 / 125000

  18. Unbalanced Model • What is the probability of getting a blue, a green and a red? • Since they do not mention it, we must assume order does not matter. • We need to look at BGR, BRG, GRB, GBR, RBG and RGB. • S = (20x15x15) + ? + (20x15x15) + (15x15x20) + (15x20x15) + (15x20x15) + (15x15x20) = 27000 • P = 27000 / 125000

  19. Without Replacement • Without replacement = not putting them back (you have less possibilities afterwards) • Given a bag with 5 red, 10 blue and 15 green and you will pick three marbles and do not replace them. • Create a model

  20. Without Replacement • What is the probability of getting a B-R-G in any order? (5 red, 10 blue and 15 green) • So we are looking at RBG, RGB, BRG BGR GRB GBR • S = (5x10x15) + (5x15x10) + (10x5x15) + (10x15x5) + (15x5x10) + (15x10x5) = 4500 • R = ? • P = 4500 / 24360 R = 30 x 29 x 28 = 24360

  21. Without Replacement • What is the probability of getting 2 B and one G or two G and one B? • So we are looking at BBG BGB GBB GGB GBG BGG • S = (10x9x15) + (10x15x9) + (15x10x9) + (15x14x10) + (15x10x14) + (10x15x14) = 10350 • P = 10350 / 24360 • Do Stencil #5,6,7 

  22. Odds For – Odds Against • Another way of showing a situation in probability is by odds • Note: These are not bookie odds – that is subjective probability! • We have so far P = S R • We will now define F as the number of failures. Thus S + F = R • # of Successes + # of Failures = # of Possibilities

  23. Odds For • Odds for are stated S : F • Eg The odds for flipping a coin and getting a head is 1:1 • Eg The odds for flipping two coins and getting two heads 1:3

  24. Odds Against • Odds against are stated F : S • Eg The odds against flipping two coins and getting two heads • 3:1 • If the odds for an event are 8:3, what is the probability? • S = 8, F = 3 Thus R = 8 + 3 = 11 • P = 8 / 11

  25. Last Question  • If the odds against are 9:23, what are the odds for and probability • 23:9 • P = 23/32 • Do Stencil #8, & #9 

More Related