The Nassau County (N.Y.) Board of Supervisors (1960’s version). In the 1960’s, the voting in the Nassau County Board of Supervisors was represented by the weighted voting system [ 58 : 31 , 31 , 28 , 21 , 2 , 2 ] . Assume that the players are denoted by P 1 through P 6 . a. List all the two- and three-player winning coalitions and find the critical players in each coalition. b. List all the winning coalitions that have P 4 as a member and find the critical players in each coalition. c. Use the results in ( b ) to find the Banzhaf power index of P 4 . d. Use the results in ( a ) and ( c ) to find the Banzhaf power distribution of the weighted voting system.
The Nassau County (N.Y.) Board of Supervisors (1960’s version). In the 1960’s, the voting in the Nassau County Board of Supervisors was represented by the weighted voting system [ 58 : 31 , 31 , 28 , 21 , 2 , 2 ] . Assume that the players are denoted by P 1 through P 6 . a. List all the two- and three-player winning coalitions and find the critical players in each coalition. b. List all the winning coalitions that have P 4 as a member and find the critical players in each coalition. c. Use the results in ( b ) to find the Banzhaf power index of P 4 . d. Use the results in ( a ) and ( c ) to find the Banzhaf power distribution of the weighted voting system.
Solution Summary: The author explains how to find the two and three-player winning coalitions and critical players in each coalition.
The Nassau County (N.Y.) Board of Supervisors (1960’s version). In the 1960’s, the voting in the Nassau County Board of Supervisors was represented by the weighted voting system
[
58
:
31
,
31
,
28
,
21
,
2
,
2
]
. Assume that the players are denoted by
P
1
through
P
6
.
a. List all the two- and three-player winning coalitions and find the critical players in each coalition.
b. List all the winning coalitions that have
P
4
as a member and find the critical players in each coalition.
c. Use the results in
(
b
)
to find the Banzhaf power index of
P
4
.
d. Use the results in
(
a
)
and
(
c
)
to find the Banzhaf power distribution of the weighted voting system.
Problem #5
Section A of my math class has 110 students. Section B of my math class has 80 students.
a). If I randomly select 15 students from the combined classes, in a way that the order of my
selection does not matter, what is the probability that all 15 students can from Section A?
b). If I randomly select 15 students from the combined classes, in a way that the order of my
selection does not matter, what is the probability that all 15 students can from Section B?
c). If I randomly select 15 students from the combined classes, in a way that the order of my
selection does not matter, what is the probability that all 7 students come from section A and 8
students come from section B?
Problem #6
A special passcode to unlock your phone consists of 4 digits where repeated digits are not
allowed. If someone were to randomly guess a 4 digit passcode, what is the probability that
they guess your passcode on the first try?
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, subject and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Discrete Distributions: Binomial, Poisson and Hypergeometric | Statistics for Data Science; Author: Dr. Bharatendra Rai;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHhyy4JMigg;License: Standard Youtube License