ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Math Videos 206 videos

CAHSEE Math 2.2 Statistics, Data, and Probability I
182 Views

Statistics, Data, and Probability I: Drill Set 2, Problem 2. If this trend continues, what will be the price in week 7?

CAHSEE Math 2.3 Statistics, Data, and Probability I
183 Views

Statistics, Data, and Probability I: Drill Set 2, Problem 3. Which of the following statements is true?

CAHSEE Math 2.4 Statistics, Data, and Probability I
183 Views

Statistics, Data, and Probability I: Drill Set 2, Problem 4. Which of the following statements is true?

See All

CAHSEE Math 6.1 Statistics, Data, and Probability I 185 Views


Share It!


Description:

Statistics, Data, and Probability I: Drill Set 6, Problem 1. What is the likelihood of getting a 6 on the next roll?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Here's a boring, unshmoopy question you'll find on some exam somewhere in your life...

00:08

Rolling a fair-numbered cube five times produced the following results: {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}.

00:15

What is the likelihood of getting a 6 on the next roll?

00:18

And here are the potential answers...

00:22

Total trick question.

00:23

It's really just asking for a probability -- that is,

00:26

what are the odds of getting a 6 on one roll of a 6 sided die?

00:31

Well, the answer is just 1 in 6.

00:33

But that's not all this problem is doing

00:35

-- it's illustrating the notion of dependence and independence in probability questions.

00:41

That is, any individual roll of a die is INDEPENDENT from any other.

00:49

So the fact that we got a 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 on previous rolls

00:52

has NOTHING TO DO with the odds of getting a 6 on the next.

00:56

Quick example: A football stadium announcer

00:58

has all 64 thousand people stand and flip a normal coin.

01:03

32 thousand get heads. All the tails sit down.

01:06

They flip again. 16 thousand get a 2nd heads. The tails sit down.

01:10

They flip 24 more times leaving 1 guy who flipped heads EACH time.

01:16

That guy, of course, writes a book entitled HOW TO FLIP HEADS.

01:19

Chapter 4 is about humidity. Chapter 5 is about how to angle your thumb.

01:24

Chapter 6 is about posture...

01:26

Obviously, the guy is a scam artist. There was no method to his madness...

01:30

there just had to be somebody who would flip heads that many times in a row.

01:33

It's just random chance.

01:35

But then you've also got your dependent events.

01:38

Like... if we had a dozen cupcakes, and one of them had a human thumb in it.

01:42

The first guy to take a cupcake would have pretty good odds of avoiding that appendage...

01:47

...but once 8 people have gone and still no thumb...

01:49

...that 9th guy is going to be getting pretty nervous.

01:52

With four cupcakes left and one thumb he's got a one in four chance of...well...you know.

01:58

But we digress.

01:59

Our answer for this one is C... we're no more likely to roll a 6 than we are any other number.

Related Videos

CAHSEE Math 5.3 Algebra and Functions
2033 Views

CAHSEE Math: Algebra and Functions Drill 5, Problem 3. Solve the equation.

SAT Math 1.2 Statistics and Probability
1060 Views

SAT Math: Statistics and Probability Drill 1, Problem 2. If the four largest numbers in the set were doubled, what would happen to the median...

SAT Math 1.4 Statistics and Probability
380 Views

SAT Math 1.4 Statistics and Probability. If two standard 6-sided dice are rolled, what is the probability that the sum of the dice will be gre...

SAT Math 1.5 Statistics and Probability
358 Views

SAT Math 1.5 Statistics and Probability. If Silas draws one card, then places it in his pocket and draws another, what is the probability that...

SAT Math 2.5 Statistics and Probability
241 Views

SAT Math 2.5 Statistics and Probability