Title: Thinking About Chance
1Chapter 17
2Thought Question 1
- Here are two very different queries about
probability
- If you flip a coin and do it fairly, what is the
probability that it will land with heads up?
- What is the probability that you will eventually
own a home, i.e. how likely do you think it is?
(If you already own a home, what is the
probability that you will own a different home in
the next five years?) - For which question was it easier to provide a
precise answer? Why?
3Thought Question 2
- Which of the following more closely describes
what it means to say that the probability of a
tossed coin landing with heads up is 1/2?
- After more and more tosses, the fraction of heads
will get closer and closer to 1/2.
- The number of heads will always be about half of
the number of tosses.
4Thought Question 3
Explain what is wrong with the following
statement, given by a student as a partial answer
to Thought Question 1 The probability that I wi
ll eventually own a home, or of any other
particular event happening, is 1/2 because either
it will happen or it wont.
5Thought Question 4
Suppose a news article claimed that drinking
coffee doubled your risk of developing a certain
disease. Assume the statistic was based on
legitimate, well-conducted research. What
additional information would you want about the
risk before deciding whether or not to quit
drinking coffee? (Hint Does this statistic provi
de any information on your actual risk?)
6Thought Question 5
A recent study estimated that the relative risk
of developing lung cancer if a woman smoked was
27.9. What do you think is meant by the term
relative risk?
7Two Concepts of Probability
- Personal-Probability Interpretation
- The degree to which a given individual believes
the event in question will happen.
- Personal belief
- Relative-Frequency Interpretation
- The proportion of time the event in question
occurs over the long run.
- Long-run relative frequency
8Relative-Frequency Probabilities
- Two ways to determine
- Physical assumptions (theoretical mathematical
model)
- Repeated observations (empirical results)
- Experience with many samples
- Simulation
9Relative-Frequency Probabilities Summary
- Can be applied when the situation can be repeated
numerous times (conceptually) and the outcome can
be observed each time.
- Relative frequency (proportion of occurrences) of
an outcome settles down to one value over the
long run. That one value is then defined to be
the probability of that outcome. - The probability cannot be used to determine
whether or not the outcome will occur on a single
occasion (it is a long-run phenomenon).
10Personal or Relative Frequency Probabilities?
- The probability that a lottery ticket will be a
winner.
- The probability that you will get a B in this
course.
- The probability that a randomly selected student
in one of your professors classes will get a B.
- The probability that the 7 a.m. flight from San
Francisco to New York will be on time on a
randomly selected day.
- The probability that the Atlanta Braves
professional baseball team will win the World
Series in the year 2010.
11Risk and Relative RiskCase Study
The following table gives results for whether or
not subjects were still smoking when given a
nicotine patch or a placebo
12Relative Risk
- Risk of continuing to smoke
- Nicotine .533 (just the proportion from the
table)
- Placebo .800
- Relative risk of continuing to smoke when using
the placebo patch compared with when using the
nicotine patch is 1.5 ( .800/.533).
- The risk of continuing to smoke when using the
placebo patch is 1.5 times the risk when using
the nicotine patch.
13Misleading Statistics about Risk
- The baseline is missing.
- The reported risk is not necessarily your risk.
14Case StudyBaseline Risk is Missing
- Premature-birth Risk Found Higher for Teens
(reported in the Sacramento Bee, April 27, 1995,
p. A7)
- The youngest girls in the study , those aged
13 to 17, were 90 percent more likely than the
women in their early 20s to deliver
prematurely. - The relative risk was 1.9.
- But what is the absolute risk for women in their
20s which is used as the baseline?
15Case StudyReported Risk May Not Be Your Risk
- Premature-birth Risk Found Higher for Teens
(reported in the Sacramento Bee, April 27, 1995,
p. A7)
- The greater risk may be due to lack of support
from the father rather than the age of the girl.
- If you are a pregnant teenage girl with plenty of
support from the father, this risk may not apply
to you.
16Key Concepts
- Personal probability
- Long-run Relative Frequency interpretation of
probability
- Relative Risk and cautious interpretation