1 / 10

BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTIONS

BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTIONS.

akasma
Télécharger la présentation

BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTIONS

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. BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTIONS • A medical center has 8 ambulances. Given the ambulance’s current condition, regular maintenance, and restocking of medical supplies, the probability of an ambulance being operational is 0.96. Find the probability that at least 6 of the 8 ambulances are operational. We will solve this problem later.

  2. BINOMIAL EXPERIMENT • A probability experiment is a binomial experiment if both of the following conditions are met: • The experiment consists of n trials whose outcomes are either successes (the outcome is the event in question) or failures (the outcome is not event in question.)

  3. BINOMIAL EXPERIMENT (CON’T) • In a binomial experiment, the trials are identical and independent with a constant probability of success, known as p, and a constant probability of failure, known as 1 – p. In other words, since there is a constant probability of success, this means that the probability of success will be the same for each and every trial of the experiment.

  4. Finding a Binomial Probability • In a binomial experiment consisting of n trials, the probability, P, of r successes (where 0 ≤ r ≤ n , p is the probability of success, and 1-p is the probability of failure) is given by the following formula: • P = nCr pr (1 – p)n-r

  5. Example: Finding a Binomial Probability • According to a survey taken by USA TODAY, about 37% of adults believe that UFOs really exist. Suppose you randomly survey 6 adults. What is the probability that exactly 2 of them believe that UFOs really exists?

  6. SOLUTION • Let p = 0.37 be the probability that a randomly selected adult believes that UFOs really exist. By survey 6 adults, you are conducting n = 6 independent trials. The probability of getting exactly r = 2 successes is: • P(r=2) = 6C2 (0.37)2 (1- 0.37)6-2 = (0.37)2(0.63)4 ≈ 0.323, or 32%

  7. Constructing a Binomial Distribution Probability Number of Believers in UFOs

  8. SOLUTION TO UFO PROBLEM • The previous slide showed the binomial distribution in a histogram. • Here are the solution values for the individual r values: • P(r = 0) = 6C0(0.37)0(0.63)6 ≈ 0.063 • P(r = 1) = 6C1(0.37)1(0.63)5 ≈ 0.220 • P(r = 2) = 6C2(0.37)2(0.63)4 ≈ 0.323 • P(r = 3) = 6C3(0.37)3(0.63)3 ≈ 0.253 • P(r = 4) = 6C4(0.37)4(0.63)2 ≈ 0.112 • P(r = 5) = 6C5(0.37)5(0.63)1 ≈ 0.026 • P(r = 6) = 6C6(0.37)6(0.63)0 ≈ 0.003 • The probability of getting at most r = 2 successes is: • P(r ≤ 2) = P(2) + P(1) + P(0) ≈ .323 + .220 + .063 ≈ 0.606 • The probability that at most 2 of the people believed that UFOs really exist is about 61%

  9. Back to the • Problem: Find the probability that at least 6 of 8 ambulances are operational. Round to the nearest tenth of a percent. • At least 6 ambulances are operational when exactly 6,7,or 8 ambulances are operational. • Find P(exactly 6) + P(exactly 7)+ P(exactly 8) • Use n = 8, p = 0.96, and 1- p = 1 – 0.96 • Use the Binomial Probability formula that we used in the UFO problem. It is on slide #4.

  10. Chicken Problem • For a science project you are incubating 12 chicken eggs. The probability that a chick is female is 0.5. • Start by calculating each binomial probability using this formula: • P (r) = nCr (0.5)r (0.5)n-r = nCr (0.5)n • Then draw a histogram of the binomial distribution based on the probability that exactly r of the chicks are female. • Finally, find the most likely number of female chicks. • What do you notice about the distribution of bars on your histogram? How does it compare with the UFO histogram?

More Related