Here is another way to obtain a set of recursive equations for determining P n , the probability that there is a string of k consecutive heads in a sequence of n flips of a fair coin that comes up heads with probability p: a. Argue that for k < n there will be a string of k consecutive heads if either 1, there is a string of k consecutive heads within the first n − 1 flips, or 2. there is no string of k consecutive heads within the first n − k − 1 flips, flip n − k is a tail, and flips n − k + 1 ,….,n are all heads. b. Using the preceding, relate P n to P n − 1 . Starting with P k = p k the recursion can be used to obtain P k + 1 , then P k + 2 , and so on, up to P n .
Here is another way to obtain a set of recursive equations for determining P n , the probability that there is a string of k consecutive heads in a sequence of n flips of a fair coin that comes up heads with probability p: a. Argue that for k < n there will be a string of k consecutive heads if either 1, there is a string of k consecutive heads within the first n − 1 flips, or 2. there is no string of k consecutive heads within the first n − k − 1 flips, flip n − k is a tail, and flips n − k + 1 ,….,n are all heads. b. Using the preceding, relate P n to P n − 1 . Starting with P k = p k the recursion can be used to obtain P k + 1 , then P k + 2 , and so on, up to P n .
Solution Summary: The author explains the recursive equations for determining Pn, the probability that there are k consecutive heads in a sequence of n flips.
Here is another way to obtain a set of recursive equations for determining
P
n
, the probability that there is a string of k consecutive heads in a sequence of n flips of a fair coin that comes up heads with probability p:
a. Argue that for
k
<
n
there will be a string of k consecutive heads if either 1, there is a string of k consecutive heads within the first
n
−
1
flips, or
2. there is no string of k consecutive heads within the first
n
−
k
−
1
flips, flip
n
−
k
is a tail, and flips
n
−
k
+
1
,….,n are all heads.
b. Using the preceding, relate
P
n
to
P
n
−
1
. Starting with
P
k
=
p
k
the recursion can be used to obtain
P
k
+
1
, then
P
k
+
2
, and so on, up to
P
n
.
2) Suppose we select two values x and y independently from the uniform distribution on
[0,1]. What is the probability that xy
1
2
100 identical balls are rolling along a straight line. They all have speed equal to v, but some of them might move in opposite directions. When two of them collide they immediately switch their direction and keep the speed v. What is the maximum number of collisions that can happen?
Let f(w) be a function of vector w Є RN, i.e. f(w) = 1+e Determine the first derivative and matrix of second derivatives off with respect to w.
Let A Є RN*N be a symmetric, positive definite matrix and bЄ RN a vector. If x ER, evaluate the integral Z(A,b) = e¯xAx+bx dx as a function of A and b.
John throws a fair die with faces labelled 1 to 6. ⚫ He gains 10 points if the die shows 1. ⚫ He gains 1 point if the die shows 2 or 4. • No points are allocated otherwise. Let X be the random variable describing John's gain at each throw. Determine the variance of X.
Female
Male
Totals
Less than High School
Diploma
0.077
0.110
0.187
High School Diploma
0.154
0.201
0.355
Some College/University
0.141
0.129
0.270
College/University Graduate
0.092
0.096
0.188
Totals
0.464
0.536
1.000
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