true
When an event is repeated, the probability of it occurring is squared. For instance, if an outcome had the probability of 1/4, then the outcome happening twice would have a probability of 1/16. Note, however, that this does not mean that the second event has different probabilities. That particular outcome will always be 1/4, regardless of anything that happened before it.
Random variables is a function that can produce outcomes with different probability and random variates is the particular outcome of a random variable.
The probability level for an outcome is the probability that the outcome was at least as extreme as the one that was observed.
Probability is the chance of some outcome while actuality is the realistic chance and actual outcome of an event.
Each outcome is equally likely and so the probability of each outcome is 1/36.
A probability of one means that the outcome will definitely occur.Not asked, but answered for completeness sake - a probability of zero means that the outcome will definitely not occur. Probability always lies between zero and one, inclusive.
An outcome is what actually happens, while the probability of that outcome is how likely that particular thing is to happen. Say I was flipping a coin. The probability of the outcome of heads is 1/2 because there are 2 possible outcomes and heads is only 1 of them. Then when I flip the coin, it lands on tails. The outcome is tails.
Theoretical Probability is the measure of likelihood that an event will have a particular outcome.
It depends on the particular problem. An outcome of 1, for example, is one of the outcomes of rolling a standard six-sided die.A probability of 1, however, which is what the question might mean, means that the outcome is certain to occur, but that outcome is not necessarily 1. This is one of the distinctions between probability and outcome - they are not the same thing.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
No. Probable means that a particular outcome is likely. Probability means the analytic likelihood of a particular outcome. Analysis (analytic, i.e. the method) means, for example, the evaluation of the outcomes to determine how well the experimental probability aligns with the theoretical probability.
If the die is a regular octahedron, then the probability for each face is 1/8.
When an event is repeated, the probability of it occurring is squared. For instance, if an outcome had the probability of 1/4, then the outcome happening twice would have a probability of 1/16. Note, however, that this does not mean that the second event has different probabilities. That particular outcome will always be 1/4, regardless of anything that happened before it.
Random variables is a function that can produce outcomes with different probability and random variates is the particular outcome of a random variable.
The probability level for an outcome is the probability that the outcome was at least as extreme as the one that was observed.
The probability distribution of an experiment is a function that maps the probability of each possible outcome of the experiment to that outcome.
False. Probability only predicts the outcome. It does not assure the outcome.