Discrete random variables (1 Viewer)

leehuan

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Hmm. I did think about the oldest possible age problem... the question wasn't specific in that regard.

I was trying to build an expression like that in the textbook but I couldn't figure out what to build.
 

InteGrand

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I think you would need to make an assumption about what the oldest possible age is, e.g. 100 years (or call it N years or something), because that'd clearly affect the answer.

Also, Pr(X > 10 | X = 10) is 0, so I think you meant something else.
Part 2) is basically asking I think for E[X | X > 10], where X is the random variable ''age that person dies at''. This is known as a conditional expectation.
 

leehuan

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Part 2) is basically asking I think for E[X | X > 10], where X is the random variable ''age that person dies at''. This is known as a conditional expectation.
Will research this later
 

leehuan

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Two quickies. (Second one isn't really random I guess)



All I want to know about this one is that is this X~Poisson(1)?



In the previous exercise I got E[X]=7/2 and Var[X]=35/12 for just one die being rolled. I'm fairly sure that therefore E[Y]=7/2 and Var[Y]=35/(12n), but I'm not sure how to prove it.
 

InteGrand

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Two quickies. (Second one isn't really random I guess)



All I want to know about this one is that is this X~Poisson(1)?



In the previous exercise I got E[X]=7/2 and Var[X]=35/12 for just one die being rolled. I'm fairly sure that therefore E[Y]=7/2 and Var[Y]=35/(12n), but I'm not sure how to prove it.
Answer to your first Q: it's not Poisson(2).

For the dice one (note Y is the sample average):
1) The expectation of the sample average is just the expectation of each Xi, i.e. 3.5
2) The variance of the sample average is (sigma^2)/n, where sigma^2 is the variance of each Xi, which you can find as E[X^2] – (3.5)^2.

(In other words, what you thought were the answers are correct.)

These follow from basic facts about sample averages (due to properties of expectation and variance of independent r.v.'s).
 

leehuan

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Answer to your first Q: it's not Poisson(2).

For the dice one (note Y is the sample average):
1) The expectation of the sample average is just the expectation of each Xi, i.e. 3.5
2) The variance of the sample average is (sigma^2)/n, where sigma^2 is the variance of each Xi, which you can find as E[X^2] – (3.5)^2.

(In other words, what you thought were the answers are correct.)

These follow from basic facts about sample averages (due to properties of expectation and variance of independent r.v.'s).
Yeah I edited back to 1 when I realised what I did lol. Lurking out of here though cause I've got a continuous r.v. qn now if you've got time :)
 

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