1 / 18

Chapter 4 - Random Variables

Todd Barr 22 Jan 2010 Geog 3000. Chapter 4 - Random Variables. Overview. Discuss the types of Random Variables Discrete Continuous Discuss the Probability Density Function What can you do with Random Variables. Random Variables. Is usually represented by an upper case X

bcantu
Download Presentation

Chapter 4 - Random Variables

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. Todd Barr 22 Jan 2010 Geog 3000 Chapter 4 - Random Variables

  2. Overview • Discuss the types of Random Variables • Discrete • Continuous • Discuss the Probability Density Function • What can you do with Random Variables

  3. Random Variables • Is usually represented by an upper case X • is a variable whose potential values are all the possible numeric outcomes of an experiment • Two types that will be discussed in this presentation are Discrete and Continuous

  4. Discrete Random Variables • Discrete Random Variables are whole numbers (0,1,3,19.....1,000,006) • They can be obtained by counting • Normally, they are a finite number of values, but can be infinite if you are willing to count that high.

  5. Discrete Probability Distribution • Discrete Probability Distributions are a description of probabilistic problem where the values that are observed are contained within predefined values • As with all discrete numbers the predefined values must be countable • They must be mutually exclusive • They must also be exhaustive

  6. Discrete Probability Distro Example • The classic fair coin example is the best way to demonstrate Discrete Probability

  7. Classic Coin Example • Experiment: Toss 2 Coins and Count the Numbers of Tails

  8. Classic Coin Continued • Histogram of our tosses

  9. Classic Coin Toss Summary • Its easy to see from the Histogram on the previous slide the area that each of the results occupy • If we repeat this test 1000 times, there is a strong probability that our results will resemble the previous Histogram but with some standard variance • For more on the classic coin toss and Discrete Random Variables please go see the Educator video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6eoHAjdAfM

  10. Its all Greek to Me • Mean and Variables of Random Variables, symbology • μ (Mu) is the symbol for population mean • σ is the symbol for standard deviation • s or x-bar are the symbols for data

  11. Mean of Probability Distribution • The Mean of Probability Distribution is a weighted average of all the possible values within an experiment • It assists in controlling for outliers and its important to determining Expected Value

  12. Expected Value • Within the discrete experiment, an expected value is the probability weighted sums of all the potential values • Is symbolized by E[X]

  13. Variance • Variance is the expected value from the Mean. • The Standard Deviation is the Square Root of the Variance

  14. Continuous Random Variables • Continuous Random Variables are defined by ranges on a number line, between 0 and 1 • This leads to an infinite range of probabilities • Each value is equally likely to occur within this range

  15. Continuous Random Variables • Since it would nearly impossible to predict the precise value of a CRV, you must include it within a range. • Such as, you know you are not going to get precisely 2” of rain, but you could put a range at Pr(1.99≤x≤2.10) • This will give you a range of probability on the bell curve, or the Probability Density Function

  16. Probability Density Function • The Probability Density of a Continuous Random Variable is the area under the curve between points a and n in your formula • In the above Bell Curve the Probability Density formula would be Pr(.57≤x≤.70) • For a more detailed explanation please see the Khan Academy at www.KhanAcademy.org

  17. Adding Random Variables • By knowing the Mean and Variance of of a Random Variable you can use this to help predict outcomes of other Random Variables • Once you create a new Random Variable, you can use the other Random Variables within your experiment to develop a more robust test • As long as the Random Variables are independent this process is simple • If the Random Variables are Dependent, then this process becomes more difficult

  18. Useful Links • PatrickJMT http://www.youtube.com/user/patrickJMT • The Khan Academy http://www.KhanAcademy.org • Wikipedia http://www.wikipeda.org

More Related