SOCR EduMaterials Activities LawOfLargeNumbers

From SOCR
Revision as of 13:16, 14 December 2006 by IvoDinov (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

SOCR Educational Materials - Activities - SOCR Law of Large Numbers Activity

This is a heterogeneous Activity that demonstrates the Law of large Numbers (LNN)

The Law of Large Numbers (LLN)

Example

The average weight of 10 students from a class of 100 students is most likely closer to the real average weight of all 100 students, compared to the average weight of 3 randomly chosen students from that same class. This is because the sample of 10 is a larger number than the sample of only 3 and better represents the entire class. At the extreme, a sample of 99 of the 100 students will produce a sample average almost exactly the same as the average for all 100 students. On the other extreme, sampling a single students will be an extremely variant estimate of the overall class average weight.

Statement of the Law of Large Numbers

If an event of probability p is observed repeatedly during independent repetitions, the ratio of the observed frequency of that event to the total number of repetitions converges towards p as the number of repetitions becomes arbitrarily large.

Complete details about the LLN can be found here

SOCR Demonstrations of the LLN

  • Exercise 1: Go to the SOCR Experiments and select the Binomial Coin Experiment. Select the number of coints (n=3) and probability of heads (p=0.5). Notice the blue model distribution of the Number of Heads (X), in the right panel. Try varying the probability (p) and/or the number of coins (n) and see how do these parameters effect the shape of this distribution. Can you make sense of it. For example, if p increases, why does the distribution move to the right and become concentrated at the right end (i.e., left-skewed)? Vice-versa, if you decrease the probability of a head, the distribution will become skewed to the right and centered in the left end of the range of X (\(0\le X\le n\)).
SOCR Activities LLN Dinov 121406 Fig1.jpg

According to the LLN, if we toss three coins 10 times (by clicking 10 times on the RUN button of the applet on the top), we observe the sampling distribution of X, how many times did we observe 0, 1, 2 or 3 heads in the 10 experiments (each experiment involves tossing 3 coins independently).

SOCR Activities LLN Dinov 121406 Fig2.jpg





Translate this page:

(default)
Uk flag.gif

Deutsch
De flag.gif

Español
Es flag.gif

Français
Fr flag.gif

Italiano
It flag.gif

Português
Pt flag.gif

日本語
Jp flag.gif

България
Bg flag.gif

الامارات العربية المتحدة
Ae flag.gif

Suomi
Fi flag.gif

इस भाषा में
In flag.gif

Norge
No flag.png

한국어
Kr flag.gif

中文
Cn flag.gif

繁体中文
Cn flag.gif

Русский
Ru flag.gif

Nederlands
Nl flag.gif

Ελληνικά
Gr flag.gif

Hrvatska
Hr flag.gif

Česká republika
Cz flag.gif

Danmark
Dk flag.gif

Polska
Pl flag.png

România
Ro flag.png

Sverige
Se flag.gif