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Detailed week 2 - Quantitative Data Analysis 1 summary notes (UvA)

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Detailed week 2 - Quantitative Data Analysis 1 summary notes (UvA) These notes provide a clear, concise and well-structured summary of the material covered in week 2 of QDA1. Perfect for students who want to reinforce their understanding, catch up on missed content or prepare for upcoming exams (got a 9 using these)

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WEEK 2

PROBABILITY CALCULUS


. What is probability?


Random experiment = an experiment with an uncertain outcome
2

Sample space (S) of a random experiment is a list of all possible outcome
Oi:S= (O1, O2, O3…) where I indicates the number of the particular possible
outcome (sample space set up correctly so experiment results in one of the
outcomes)
– e.g. experiment coin: “flip a coin” has sample space (heads, tails)
– e.g. experiment opinion “draw a random customer and record their
opinion about a service” has sample space (very bad, bad, neutral, good,
very good)


Probability of an outcome = long-run relative frequency of the outcome,
when experiment has been repeated an “infinite” number of times - P(Oi)


S = (O1, O2, …)
– 0 ≤ P(Oi) ≤ 1 for every possible outcome Oi
– ΣP(Oi) = 1 (sum of probabilities of all possible outcomes)


If all N possible outcomes are equally likely then each possible outcome in
the long run has a relative frequency 1/N


Event = a collection of one or more outcomes in the sample space
Probability of an event = the sum of the probabilities of the relevant
outcomes


. Simple, joint and conditional probability


– Simple (or marginal) probability = when A is an event, then P(A) -

1 involves one event
– Joint (or simultaneous) probability = if events are A and B, the P(A and
B) - it is the probability of the joint occurrence of two events
– A and B must occur simultaneously

, – Conditional probability = the probability of one event, given the
occurrence of another event
– P (A|B) - prob. of event A given B occurs
– Also written as P(A and B)/P(B)


. Rules, exclusive and independent


Complement = all outcomes that are not in the event



= complement rule
– Because will either be A or its complement Ac


Mutually exclusive = when two events cant occur at the same time
– P (A and B) = 0


Addition rule:
P (A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B)


– If A and B are mutually exclusive then: P (A or B) = P(A) + P(B)


Independent events = the fact that B occurs does not affect the probability
of A occurring
– P(A) = P(A|B) = P(A|Bc) -> prob. of A is the same regardless if B occurs
or not
– Two events are independent if the occurrence of one of the events does
not change the probability of getting the other




Multiplication rule



= P(A) x P(B) because P(B|A) = P(B)




. Random variables and probability distributions


A function is called random variable because the outcome is random
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