May 2025
Intermediate to advanced
730 pages
20h 14m
English
Having a probability space to model our experiments and observations is fine and all, but in almost all of the cases, we are interested in a quantitative measure of the outcome. To give you an example, let’s consider an already familiar situation: tossing coins. Suppose that we are tossing a fair coin n times but we are only interested in the number of heads. How do we model the probability space this time?
By taking things one step at a time; first, we construct an event space by enumerating all possible outcomes in a single set, just like we already did in Section 18.2.1:
Since the coin is fair, each ...
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