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The experimental probability of anything cannot be answered without doing it, because that is what experimental probability is - the probability that results from conducting an experiment, a posteri. This is different than theoretical probability, which can be computed a priori. For instance, the theoretical probability of rolling a 3 is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667, but the experimental probability changes every time you run the experiment
Yes
An experiment is carried out repeatedly. The total number of times the experiment is conducted and the number of times in which the results are outcomes of interest are recorded. These counts are then used to calculate the experimental probabilities of the outcomes.
Theoretical probability is the probability of something occurring when the math is done out on paper or 'in theory' such as the chance of rolling a six sided dice and getting a 2 is 1/6. Experimental probability is what actually occurs during an experiment trying to determine the probability of something. If a six sided dice is rolled ten times and the results are as follows 5,2,6,2,5,3,1,4,6,1 then the probability of rolling a 2 is 1/3. The law of large numbers states the more a probability experiment is preformed the closer to the theoretical probability the results will be.
confounding variable
The experimental probability of anything cannot be answered without doing it, because that is what experimental probability is - the probability that results from conducting an experiment, a posteri. This is different than theoretical probability, which can be computed a priori. For instance, the theoretical probability of rolling a 3 is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667, but the experimental probability changes every time you run the experiment
The theoretical model does not accurately reflect the experiment.
The experimental probability of anything cannot be answered without doing it, because that is what experimental probability is - the probability that results from conducting an experiment, a posteri. This is different than theoretical probability, which can be computed a priori. For instance, the theoretical probability of rolling an even number is 3 in 6, or 1 in 2, or 0.5, but the experimental probability changes every time you run the experiment.
The experimental probability is figured out when a person goes through the trouble of actually trying it out. Theoretical probability is when a person comes to a conclusion of what is most likely, based off of the experiment results.
Yes
Empirical or experimental probability.
An experiment is carried out repeatedly. The total number of times the experiment is conducted and the number of times in which the results are outcomes of interest are recorded. These counts are then used to calculate the experimental probabilities of the outcomes.
These are the experimental values.
Theoretical probability is the probability of something occurring when the math is done out on paper or 'in theory' such as the chance of rolling a six sided dice and getting a 2 is 1/6. Experimental probability is what actually occurs during an experiment trying to determine the probability of something. If a six sided dice is rolled ten times and the results are as follows 5,2,6,2,5,3,1,4,6,1 then the probability of rolling a 2 is 1/3. The law of large numbers states the more a probability experiment is preformed the closer to the theoretical probability the results will be.
In an experiment there is one thing that it is compared with experimental data. This is when the end results.The experiment data is compared to one thing. It is compared to the end results.
If the experiment is not reproducible, no one can perform the experiment independently to confirm the results.
Experimental probability is what actually happens in the real world. For example, if you played a game 60 times where you flip a coin and heads scores a point, theoretically you should get 30 points, right? Well, experimental probability is the actual results. In fact, your experimental probability for that game could even be 45 points scored in 60 tries. just remember: theoretical=in a perfect math world; experimental=real world results.