Not true. The greater the number of rolls, the less likely it becomes that
the results are exactly the expected value.
Cogno
-----Original Message-----
From: vpFREE@yahoogroups.com [mailto:vpFREE@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of
David Silvus
Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2011 7:58 PM
To: vpfree@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [vpFREE] Re: Best Randomness Analogy Contest
True, but as the number of rolls approaches infinity the distribution will
be exactly that.
To: vpFREE@yahoogroups.com
From: guruperf@att.net
Date: Fri, 14 Jan 2011 14:11:55 -0800
Subject: Re: [vpFREE] Re: Best Randomness Analogy Contest
________________________________
>"Equiprobable & Unpredictable". Everything has an equal chance of occurring
and
>you can't predict it.
>Toss two fair dice. Everything has an equal chance of occuring and you
can't
>predict it? No, I can predict the follow outcomes:
2 occurs 1 out of 36
3 occurs 2 out of 36
4 occurs 3 out of 36
5 occurs 4 out of 36
6 occurs 5 out of 36
7 occurs 6 out of 36
8 occurs 5 out of 36
9 occurs 4 out of 36
10 occurs 3 out of 36
11 occurs 2 out of 36
12 occurs 1 out of 36
But not in EVERY 36 throws. Any stat-head out there want to calculate the
odds
of that EXACT distribution occurring in one series of 36 throws?
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