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  #1  
Old 11-01-2004, 12:48 PM
AceKQJT AceKQJT is offline
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Location: Lake Charles, Louisiana
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Default Finding the \"bell\" using Binomial Distribution

Ok. So I'm gonna flip a coin 1000 times. I am looking for a range in which heads comes up with 90% certainty. I'll give an example, because I can't even understand what I've written:

I know that the chance of heads coming up exactly 500 times is 5.253%. I can calculate the binomial distribution for each case of "successes", then manually find that 90.6% of the time, heads will show up between 474 and 526. I could express this by saying

"If you flip a coin 1000 times, there is a 90.6% chance that the coin will come up heads 500 (+/- 26) times."

Is there any way to come to this result other than calculating individual successes for the entire trial, and then manually adding the results?

--Casey
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  #2  
Old 11-01-2004, 12:55 PM
BlueBear BlueBear is offline
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Default Re: Finding the \"bell\" using Binomial Distribution

Yes, my statistics is hopelessly rusty but I think for a large enough sample size (such as 1000), you can use approximate the binomial distribution as a normal distribution and calculate these results easily. Any basic statistics text will discuss this in greater depth.
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  #3  
Old 11-01-2004, 05:31 PM
Deli Deli is offline
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Default Re: Finding the \"bell\" using Binomial Distribution

Have a look at this site that lorinda linked to recently.
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  #4  
Old 11-02-2004, 10:24 AM
AceKQJT AceKQJT is offline
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Default Re: Finding the \"bell\" using Binomial Distribution

Yeah...I can come up with the numbers this site does. I guess I'll just figure that +/- 2xSD will give me roughly 97% certainty.

Thanks anyway,

--Casey
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