https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/CIS2033-Spring13/Modern_intro_probability_statistics_Dekking05.pdf
Basic to statistics is that one usually does not consider one experiment, that the same experiment is performed several times. For example, we throw a coin two times.
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www.temple.bncollege.com
https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/CIS2033-Spring12/ElementaryProbabilityforApplications/ch2.pdf
One of the reasons Selix won so many times in 2006 is that he spent about $200 a week or more than $10,000 a year on scratch-off games. If the games cost $1 then this would be 10,000 plays with an approximate 1/100,000 chance of winning.
https://cis-linux1.temple.edu/~tug29203/25fall-2033/lectures/ch1-1.pdf
Suppose you’re on a game show, and you’re given the choice of three doors; behind one door is a car; behind the others, goats. You pick a door, say No. 1, and the host, who knows what’s behind the doors, opens another door, say No. 3, which has a goat.
https://sites.temple.edu/lnaveen/data/
The data span 1992-2014. If you use this data, please cite our paper on symmetry in pay for luck: Daniel, N.D., Li, Y., and Naveen, L., 2020. Symmetry in Pay for Luck ...
https://cis-linux1.temple.edu/~tug29203/25fall-2033/lectures/ch1-3.pdf
Calculation of Conditional Probability In observing the outcomes of a random experiment, one is often interested in how the outcome of one event A is influenced by that of another event B. If A and B are events in the sample space S, the conditional probability of A given B, when P(B) > 0 is: P(A∩B) P(A|B) = P(B)
https://www.fox.temple.edu/directory/kuang-yao-lee-tuh41971
Biography Dr. Kuang-Yao Lee joins the Fox School on a tenure-track appointment within the Department of Statistical Science. Prior to his arrival, Lee served as an associate research scientist at Yale University’s Center for Statistical Genomics and Proteomics, where he investigated and developed statistical methods for high-dimension data and conducted collaborative research. His current ...
https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/CIS2033-Spring13/PPT/C2_CIS2033.ppt
If we consider an experiment that only has two outcomes, such as success or failure, one outcome has a probability p to occur where 0 < p < 1, and the other outcome has a probability of 1 - p to occur. 2.3 – Probability To assign probability to an event, we can use the additivity property.
https://cst.temple.edu/sites/cst/files/IPLecture1.pdf
What is integrable probability? Imagine you are building a tower out of standard square blocks that fall down at random time moments. How tall will it be after a large time T? It is natural to expect that Height = const T + random fluctuations What can one say about the fluctuations?
https://www.fox.temple.edu/directory/gurdip-bakshi-tuk40718
Biography Gurdip Bakshi is the Marvin Wachman Professor of Finance. He joins the Fox School from the University of Maryland, where he was the Dean’s Professor of Finance at the Smith School of Business. Bakshi’s research interests include stock valuation, option valuation, term structure of interest rates, asset pricing, capital, commodity, and currency markets, crashes, and international ...