Consider a game in which a fair coin is tossed repeatedly. When the cumulative number of heads is greater than the cumulative number of tails, heads is in the lead. Tails moves to the lead when the cumulative number of tails is greater than the cumulative number of heads. Intuition might suggest that with a large number of coin tosses, heads and tails would spend roughly equal time in the lead. In fact, it is much more likely that one side or the other will be lucky a high proportion of the time. When the blue line is above the horizontal, heads is in the lead; when it is below, tails is in the lead. Vary the random seed and observe how often one side or the other is in the lead close to 100% of the timeComponente Curricular::Ensino Médio::...
We discuss some particular cases of the following problem. Each of m persons tosses a coin. Those wh...
In the ordered flip sequence HTTHHTHHHTHTTHHT, the four-flip sequence THHT occurs before HTHT. Two p...
How many consecutive heads can we observe in a run of coin tossing of length n? Although the problem...
Consider a game in which a fair coin is tossed repeatedly. When the cumulative number of heads is gr...
What is the average number of coin tosses needed before a particular sequence of heads and tails fir...
What is the average number of coin tosses needed before a particular sequence of heads and tails fir...
What is the average number of coin tosses needed before a particular sequence of heads and tails fir...
Consider the following guessing game: Lucy thinks of a number that is in between 0 and 100 and James...
For a homework assignment in a statistics course, half the class was asked to record the actual resu...
Noções de Estatística.A simulation of the statistical properties of the outcome of tosses of many co...
<p>On the top there are two possible coins with slightly different distributions for yielding a head...
The following scenario was examined in [1]: we toss ideal coins, then toss those which show tails a...
This Mathematica demonstration showcases the law of large numbers, a key theorem in probability theo...
Given a sequence of numbers (Formula presented.) in [0, 1], consider the following experiment. First...
When asked to mentally simulate coin tosses, people generate sequences that differ systematically fr...
We discuss some particular cases of the following problem. Each of m persons tosses a coin. Those wh...
In the ordered flip sequence HTTHHTHHHTHTTHHT, the four-flip sequence THHT occurs before HTHT. Two p...
How many consecutive heads can we observe in a run of coin tossing of length n? Although the problem...
Consider a game in which a fair coin is tossed repeatedly. When the cumulative number of heads is gr...
What is the average number of coin tosses needed before a particular sequence of heads and tails fir...
What is the average number of coin tosses needed before a particular sequence of heads and tails fir...
What is the average number of coin tosses needed before a particular sequence of heads and tails fir...
Consider the following guessing game: Lucy thinks of a number that is in between 0 and 100 and James...
For a homework assignment in a statistics course, half the class was asked to record the actual resu...
Noções de Estatística.A simulation of the statistical properties of the outcome of tosses of many co...
<p>On the top there are two possible coins with slightly different distributions for yielding a head...
The following scenario was examined in [1]: we toss ideal coins, then toss those which show tails a...
This Mathematica demonstration showcases the law of large numbers, a key theorem in probability theo...
Given a sequence of numbers (Formula presented.) in [0, 1], consider the following experiment. First...
When asked to mentally simulate coin tosses, people generate sequences that differ systematically fr...
We discuss some particular cases of the following problem. Each of m persons tosses a coin. Those wh...
In the ordered flip sequence HTTHHTHHHTHTTHHT, the four-flip sequence THHT occurs before HTHT. Two p...
How many consecutive heads can we observe in a run of coin tossing of length n? Although the problem...