Key Concepts
- Binomial experiments consisted of a fixed number of independent trials.
- The probability of success and failure is the same in each trial of a binomial experiment.
Glossary
Bernoulli trials: an experiment with the following characteristics:
- There are only two possible outcomes called “success” and “failure” for each trial.
- The probability p of a success is the same for any trial (so the probability q=1−p of a failure is the same for any trial).
binomial experiment: a statistical experiment that satisfies the following three conditions:
- There are a fixed number of trials, n.
- There are only two possible outcomes, called “success” and, “failure,” for each trial. The letter p denotes the probability of a success on one trial, and q denotes the probability of a failure on one trial.
- The n trials are independent and are repeated using identical conditions.
binomial probability distribution: a discrete random variable (RV) that arises from Bernoulli trials; there are a fixed number, n, of independent trials. The notation is: X∼B(n,p). The mean is μ=np and the standard deviation is σ=√np(1−p). The probability of exactly x successes in n trials is
P(X=x)=(nx)px(q)n−x,where(nx)=n!x!(n−x)!
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- Introductory Statistics. Authored by: Barbara Illowsky, Susan Dean. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: https://openstax.org/books/introductory-statistics/pages/4-key-terms. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/introductory-statistics/pages/1-introduction