Introduction To Probability - Binomial and Normal Distributions
Introduction To Probability - Binomial and Normal Distributions
PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTIONS:
BINOMIAL AND NORMAL
CHAPTER 12
FHSC 282
Spring 2019
SAMPLE
=?
n, X
Descriptive Statistics
Sampling from a Population
SAMPLES
n
Population
n
N
n
n
n
n
n
Basics
• 0 ≤ P(A) ≤ 1
• If A = A1+A2+…+An; P(A1+A2+…+An) =1
Example 2:
If you toss the die once, what’s the:
1
-Probability of having the number 3? P ( x 3) 0.166
6
3
-Probability of having an even number? P (even _ nb) 0.5
6
P(2T)=
Contingency P(0 H)=1/4 TT
table
P ( A B ) P ( A) P ( B )
P ( AorB) P ( A) P ( B ) P ( A B )
5 6 7 8 9 10
UNCONDITIONAL PROBABILITY
Everyone in the entire population is eligible to be selected
Recall Example 4:
What’s the probability of selecting a 9-year old child given that she is
a girl? 461
P (9 yr / girl) 0.169 => 16.0% of the girls are 9 years old
2730
What’s the probability of selecting a girl given that she is 9 years
old? 461
P ( girl / 9 year) 0.523 => 52.3% of the 9 years old are girls
881
• P(boy) = • P(girl or B) =
209/400=0.52 191/400 + 112/400 - 55/400 = 0.62
• P(A)= • P(girl and C) =
141/400=0.35 33/400=0.0825
• P(A or B) = • P(C/girl) =
141/400 + 112/400 = 33/191=0.17
253/400=0.63
• P(A or B) =
1-P(C) = 1- 147/400=0.63
Chapter 12.Introduction to Probability: Binomial and Normal distributions 14
Conditional Probability
Assumptions:
1. Each Bernoulli trial has 2 possible outcomes
2. Bernoulli trials are identical and independent: outcome of each
trial is independent from the outcome of any other trial
3. The probability of success p stays constant from trial to trial
n!
P(r _ successes) p r q nr
r!(n r )!
Where:
n =number of trials in an experiment
r =number of successes
n-r = the number of failures
p =the probability of success
q =1-p, the probability of failure
4!
P(r 1) 0.2510.7541 4 0.25 0.753 0.42
1!(4 1)!
There is a 20.13% chance that exactly 7 of 10 patients will report relief from
symptoms when the probability that anyone reports relief is 80%
5!
P(r 0) 0.040 0.9650 0.8154
0!(5 0)!
There is a 81.54% chance that all patients will survive the attack when the chance
that any one dies is 0.04.
10!
𝑃 𝑟 = 10 = 0.110 0.9 0 = 0.000 …
10! 10 − 10 !
There is a 0% chance that all 10 people were hospitalized at least once during
the year.
There is a 7% chance that at least 3 were hospitalized at least once during the
year.
The normal distribution model is appropriate when a particular experiment results in a continuous outcome.
The normal probability model applies when the distribution of the continuous outcome follows the “Gaussian
distribution”
Chapter 12.Introduction to Probability: Binomial and Normal distributions 34
The Normal Distribution
If we want to find the proportion of students with scores between 550 and 600
=> we would need a table with normal curves areas.
But it is impossible to have such a table for all different possibilities => we use a
standardized normal curve (baring in mind that all normal curves are symmetrical
and have an area under the curve of 1)
P(X<29)=0.5
0.5 0.5
11 17 23 29 35 41 47
Example: Normal Distribution
11 17 23 29 35 41 47
Standard Normal Distribution Z
■ Normal distribution with = 0 and s = 1
-3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3
Normal Distribution
x μ
Z
σ
P(X < 35) = P(Z < 1) = ?
11 17 23 29 35 41 47
Normal Distribution
P(X < 35) = P(Z < 1).
Using the Table above, P(Z < 1.00) = 0.5+0.3413= 0.8413
Normal Distribution
P(X < 35) = 0.5 + 0.34 = 0.84
0.5 0.34
11 17 23 29 35 41 47
Normal Distribution
• What is the probability that a male has BMI
less than 30?
P(X<30)=?
11 17 23 29 30 35 41 47
Normal Distribution
x μ 30 29
Z 0.17
σ 6
p(Z>1.33)=0.5-0.4802=0.0918
9% of the population has a blood glucose level
higher than 150
1.33
p(Z>2)=0.5-0.4772=0.0228
2% of the population has a blood glucose level
lower than 50
p(0<Z<1.33)+p(0<Z<0.33)=0.4082+0.1293=0.5375
P(45≤X≤75)= P(-1.5≤Z≤1.5)=2x(0.4332)=0.8664
86.6% of the boys’ heights is between 45 and
-1.5 1.5 75 inches
P(X<50)= P(Z<-1)=0.5-0.3413=0.1587
-1 15.9% of the boys’ heights is less than 50 inches
P(X75)= P(Z1.5)=0.5-0.4332=0.0668
6.68% of the boys’ heights is 75 inches or more
1.5
67 72
Z 1.67
3
P(Z<-1.67)=0.5-0.4525= 0.0475
4.75% of the girls measure less than 67 cm at
10 months, 67cm is the 4.75th percentile
=> those girls will probably need clinical
-1.67 intervention
Chapter 12.Introduction to Probability: Binomial and Normal distributions 58
Exercise
• Given that the mean blood pressure for individuals between
20 and 39 years follows a normal distribution with mean
120 and standard deviation 10, calculate the following
probabilities.
What is the blood pressure measurement below which
we find 95% of healthy individuals aged between 20
and 39 years?
• X=µ+z𝜎
X=120+z10
• 95% below or 5% above
• Form the standard normal
table, 95% corresponds to 1.64
• Z=x-120/10
• 1.64=(x-120)/10
• X=136.4
• Therefore 95% of healthy
individuals have blood pressure
measurement of 136.4 mm Hg or
less.
Chapter 12.Introduction to Probability: Binomial and Normal distributions 60
61
What is the blood pressure measurement below
which we find 97.5% of healthy individuals aged
between 20 and 39 years?
Percentile Z
1st –2.326
2.5th –1.960
5th –1.645
10th –1.282
0.95
50th 0 0.05
90th 1.282 0
-4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4
97.5th 1.960
99th 2.326