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MOMENT GENERATING FUNCTION AND STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS

MOMENT GENERATING FUNCTION AND STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS. MOMENT GENERATING FUNCTION. The m.g.f. of random variable X is defined as. for t Є (-h,h) for some h>0. Properties of m.g.f. M(0)=E[1]=1 If a r.v. X has m.g.f. M(t), then Y=aX+b has a m.g.f.

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MOMENT GENERATING FUNCTION AND STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS

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  1. MOMENT GENERATING FUNCTION AND STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS

  2. MOMENT GENERATING FUNCTION The m.g.f. of random variable X is defined as for t Є (-h,h) for some h>0.

  3. Properties of m.g.f. • M(0)=E[1]=1 • If a r.v. X has m.g.f. M(t), then Y=aX+b has a m.g.f. • M.g.f does not always exists (e.g. Cauchy distribution)

  4. Example • Suppose that X has the following p.d.f. Find the m.g.f; expectation and variance.

  5. CHARACTERISTIC FUNCTION The c.h.f. of random variable X is defined as for all real numbers t. C.h.f. always exists.

  6. Uniqueness Theorem: • If two r.v.s have mg.f.s that exist and are equal, then they have the same distribution. • If two r,v,s have the same distribution, then they have the same m.g.f. (if they exist) Similar statements are true for c.h.f.

  7. Problem • It is sometimes the case that exact values of random variables (Y1, Y2, …) cannot be observed, but we can observe they are greater than some fixed value. Let Y1, Y2, … be i.i.d. r.v.s. Let a be a fixed number on real line. For i=1,2,… define,

  8. Problem, cont. For example, if a manufacturing process produces parts with strength Yi that are tested to see if they can withstand stress a, then Xi denotes whether the strength is at least a or it is less than a. In such a case, we cannot directly observe the strength Yi of the ith part, but we can observe whether it breaks in stress test.

  9. Problem, cont. • Define p=P(Y1≥a) and q=1-p, Sn=X1+X2+…+Xn. Note that, Sn is the number of Y1, …, Yn that exceed a. • Define the characteristic function, say , of a r.v. X • Find • Find • Find P(Sn=j)

  10. Other generating functions • logM(t) is called cumulant generating function. • is factorial moment generating function. • Note: there is a simple relation between m.g.f. and f.m.g.f.

  11. Other generating functions

  12. Example • Suppose X has the following p.m.f. Find the expectation and variance of X. • Solution: Let’s use factorial m.g.f.

  13. Example

  14. STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS

  15. Recall • Random variable: A function defined on the sample space S that associates a real number with each outcome in S.

  16. Example • Toss three coins • Sample space S={s1=HHH,s2=HHT,…,s6=THT,s7=TTH,s8=TTT} • Define X=number of heads: X(s1)=3,X(s6)=1,X(s8)=0 • Define Y=number of tails before first head: Y(s1)=0, Y(s6)=1, Y(s8)=3

  17. Random variables • A random variable is continuous if its CDF, F(x)=P(X≤x), is continuous. • A random variable is discrete if its CDF, F(x)=P(X≤x), is a step function. • It is possible for a CDF to have continuous pieces and steps, but we will mostly concentrate on the previous two bullets in this course.

  18. SOME DISCRETE PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTIONS Degenerate, Uniform, Bernoulli, Binomial, Poisson, Negative Binomial, Geometric, Hypergeometric

  19. DEGENERATE DISTRIBUTION • An rv X is degenerate at point k if The cdf:

  20. UNIFORM DISTRIBUTION • A finite number of equally spaced values are equally likely to be observed. • Example: throw a fair die. P(X=1)=…=P(X=6)=1/6

  21. BERNOULLI DISTRIBUTION • A Bernoulli trial is an experiment with only two outcomes. An r.v. X has Bernoulli(p) distribution if

  22. BERNOULLI DISTRIBUTION • P(X=0)=1-p and P(X=1)=p • E(X)=p

  23. BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION Y = total number of successes in n Bernoulli trials. • Define an rv Yby • There are n trials (n is finite and fixed). • 2. Each trial can result in a success or a failure. • 3. The probability p of success is the same for all the trials. • 4. All the trials of the experiment are independent.

  24. BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • Example: • There are black and white balls in a box. Select and record the color of the ball. Put it back and re-pick (sampling with replacement). • n: number of independent and identical trials • p: probability of success (e.g. probability of picking a black ball) • X: number of successes in n trials

  25. BINOMIAL THEOREM • For any real numbers x and y and integer n>0

  26. BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • If Y~Bin(n,p), then

  27. POISSON DISTRIBUTION • The number of occurrences in a given time interval can be modeled by the Poisson distribution. • e.g. number of customers to arrive in a bank between 13:00 and 13:30. • Another application is in spatial distributions. • e.g. modeling the distribution of bomb hits in an area or the distribution of fish in a lake.

  28. POISSON DISTRIBUTION • If X~ Poi(λ), then • E(X)=Var(X)=λ

  29. Relationship between Binomial and Poisson Let =np. The mgf of Poisson() The limiting distribution of Binomial rv is the Poisson distribution.

  30. NEGATIVE BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION (PASCAL OR WAITING TIME DISTRIBUTION) • X: number of Bernoulli trials required to get a fixed number of failures before the r th success; or, alternatively, • Y: number of Bernoulli trials required to get a fixed number of successes, such as r successes.

  31. NEGATIVE BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION (PASCAL OR WAITING TIME DISTRIBUTION) X~NB(r,p)

  32. NEGATIVE BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • An alternative form of the pdf: Note: Y=X+r

  33. GEOMETRIC DISTRIBUTION • Distribution of the number of Bernoulli trials required to get the first success. • It is the special case of the Negative Binomial Distribution r=1. X~Geometric(p)

  34. GEOMETRIC DISTRIBUTION • Example: If probability is 0.001 that a light bulb will fail on any given day, then what is the probability that it will last at least 30 days? • Solution:

  35. HYPERGEOMETRIC DISTRIBUTION • A box contains N marbles. Of these, M are red. Suppose that n marbles are drawn randomly from the box without replacement. The distribution of the number of red marbles, x is X~Hypergeometric(N,M,n) It is dealing with finite population.

  36. HYPERGEOMETRIC DISTRIBUTION • As N →∞, hypergeometric → binomial. • In that case, sampling with or without replacement does not make much difference (especially if n/N is small).

  37. MULTIVARIATE DISTRIBUTIONS

  38. EXTENDED HYPERGEOMETRIC DISTRIBUTION • Suppose that a collection consists of a finite number of items, N and that there are k+1 different types; M1of type 1, M2 of type 2, and so on. Select n items at random without replacement, and let Xi be the number of items of type i that are selected. The vector X=(X1, X2,…,Xk) has an extended hypergeometric distribution and the joint pdf is

  39. MULTINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • Let E1,E2,...,Ek,Ek+1be k+1 mutually exclusive and exhaustive events which can occur on any trial of an experiment with P(Ei)=pi,i=1,2,…,k+1. On n independent trials of the experiment, let Xi be the number of occurrences of the event Ei. Then, the vector X=(X1, X2,…,Xk) has a multinomial distribution with joint pdf

  40. MULTINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • Experiment involves drawing with replacement. • Binomial is a special case of multinomial with k+1=2

  41. MULTINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • Consider trinomial case for simplicity.

  42. MULTINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • M.g.f. of X1: X1~Bin(n,p1) Similarly, X2~Bin(n,p2) But, Cov(X1,X2)≠0! Cov(X1,X2)=?

  43. MULTINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • Example: Suppose we have a bowl with 10 marbles - 2 red marbles, 3 green marbles, and 5 blue marbles. We randomly select 4 marbles from the bowl, with replacement. What is the probability of selecting 2 green marbles and 2 blue marbles?

  44. MULTINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION • n = 4, k+1=3, nred = 0, ngreen = 2, nblue = 2 • pred = 0.2, pgreen = 0.3, pblue = 0.5 • P = [ n! / ( n1! * n2! * ... nk! ) ] * ( p1n1 * p2n2 * . . . * pknk ) P = [ 4! / ( 0! * 2! * 2! ) ] * [ (0.2)0 * (0.3)2 * (0.5)2 ] P = 0.135

  45. Problem 1. a) Does a distribution exist for which the m.g.f. ? If yes, find it. If no, prove it. b) Does a distribution exist for which the m.g.f. ? If yes, find it. If no, prove it.

  46. Solution

  47. Problem 2. An appliance store receives a shipment of 30 microwave ovens, 5 of which are (unknown to the manager) defective. The store manager selects 4 ovens at random, without replacement, and tests to see if they are defective. Let X=number of defectives found. Calculate the pmf and cdf of X.

  48. Solution

  49. Problem 3. Let X denote the number of “do loops” in a Fortran program and Y the number of runs needed for a novice to debug the program. Assume that the joint density for (X,Y) is given in the following table.

  50. Problem

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