The document discusses the binomial distribution, a discrete probability distribution that describes the number of successes in a sequence of n independent yes/no experiments, each of which yields success with probability p. It provides the key properties of binomial experiments, the formula for calculating the binomial probability mass function, and examples of using the binomial distribution.
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Binomial Distribution
The document discusses the binomial distribution, a discrete probability distribution that describes the number of successes in a sequence of n independent yes/no experiments, each of which yields success with probability p. It provides the key properties of binomial experiments, the formula for calculating the binomial probability mass function, and examples of using the binomial distribution.
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Binomial Distribution
Dr. Poonam Kaushal
Assistant Professor ICFAI Business School Binomial Distribution
The binomial distribution is a commonly used discrete
distribution in statistics. The normal distribution as opposed to a binomial distribution is a continuous distribution.
Bernoulli trial or Bernoulli experiment
Binomial Distribution
A binomial experiment has the following properties:
experiment consists of n identical and independent trials
each trial results in one of two outcomes: success or failure
P(success) = p
P(failure) = q = 1 - p for all trials
The random variable of interest, X, is the number of successes
in the n trials.
X has a binomial distribution with parameters n and p
Assumptions
Each trial has only two outcomes
The experiment has n identical trials Each trial is independent of the other trials The probability of getting one outcome (success) p is held constant and the probability of getting the other outcome (failure) is also held constant, represented by (1 - p). Includes replacement for each trial. It can be used to approximate without replacement trials What is P(x) for binomial? Examples Example 1: If a coin is tossed 5 times, using binomial distribution find the probability of:
(a)Exactly 2 heads
(b) At least 4 heads.
Binomial Distribution Formula for the Mean and Variance?
The mean (expected value) of a binomial
random variable is np
The standard deviation of a binomial
isnpq random variable Example
Random Guessing; n = 100 questions.
Probability of correct guess; p = 1/4 Probability of wrong guess; q = 3/4 1 Expected Value = np 100 25 On average, you will get 25 right. 4 Standard Deviation = 1 3 npq np 1 p 100 4.33 4 4 Example
Cancer Treatment; n = 20 patients
Probability of successful treatments; p = 0.7 Probability of no success; q = ?
Calculate the mean and standard deviation.
Normal Approximation
For large n, the binomial distribution can be
approximated by the normal,
X np Z npq is approximately standard normal for large n.