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Consortium for Mathematics and its Applications

Product ID: Articles
Supplementary Print
Undergraduate
High School

Penney Ante: Counterintuitive Probabilities in Coin Tossing

Author: R.S. Nickerson


Coin-tossing is generally viewed as the quintessential example of a random process. We focus on some counterintuitive aspects of sequences that cointossing produces. Equally-likely sequences of heads and tails of a specified length are not all equally likely to occur first. This realizationleads naturallyto other surprising facts about coin-tossing. However, aspects of the outcomes of coin-tossing that may be counterintuitive when first encountered can be made acceptable to intuition after reflection and analysis.

©2007 by COMAP, Inc.
The UMAP Journal 28.4
30 pages

Mathematics Topics:

Linear Algebra, Probability

Application Areas:

Other areas of mathematic, Mathematics Education

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