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New Member
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Oct 21, 2009, 08:35 PM
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Probability of 7 Cards
I am studying for a test and am struggling with this question. Can anyone help?
Suppose you have an unusual deck of cards for a game called Seven-Oh! The probabilities
of drawing each card (1 through 7) in this game are given in the table.
x prob(x)
1 0.11
2 0.08
3 0.23
4 0.22
5 0.05
6 0.15
7 0.16
Suppose someone makes a casino game from these cards. It costs $10 to play, and
you could win $100 if you draw a 5 or you could win $10 if you draw a 2 or a 7.
Otherwise, you win $0. Is this a winning game? Determine the probabilities of
each dollar amount (including $0) and calculate the expected value to answer this
question.
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Junior Member
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Oct 21, 2009, 08:51 PM
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 Originally Posted by happyclp
I am studying for a test and am struggling with this question. Can anyone help?
Suppose you have an unusual deck of cards for a game called Seven-Oh! The probabilities
of drawing each card (1 through 7) in this game are given in the table.
x prob(x)
1 0.11
2 0.08
3 0.23
4 0.22
5 0.05
6 0.15
7 0.16
Suppose someone makes a casino game from these cards. It costs $10 to play, and
you could win $100 if you draw a 5 or you could win $10 if you draw a 2 or a 7.
Otherwise, you win $0. Is this a winning game? Determine the probabilities of
each dollar amount (including $0) and calculate the expected value to answer this
question.
Lets generalize this a bit. Instead of winning 100 dollars 5% of the time, we can make it 10 dollars 50% of the time. (For example if you play 100 games, you should win about 5 times, either way you earn 500 dollars.)
The probability of winning 10 dollars back then is 0.5+0.16++0.08
So your probability of winning JUST your money back is 74%, over time, you will end up losing money from not making it back.
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New Member
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Oct 21, 2009, 08:57 PM
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Okay, but how do you figure it out by using expected value?
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Junior Member
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Oct 21, 2009, 08:59 PM
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I recall something like this back in high school haha. Something I kind of just thought about.
A winning game would mean you would make back your money, so I just though about the odds of getting $10 back out of 100 games.
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Uber Member
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Oct 21, 2009, 10:06 PM
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Think of it like this:
There's .05 probability of getting the 5. That gets you $100
There's .24 probability of getting the 2 or the 7. (.08 + .16) That gets you $10.
Now, what's the probability of getting nothing? If you get a 1, 3, 4 or 6. What's the probability of getting any of those?
That is basically in the end your three possibilities of what will happen. If you add the probabilities together, then instead of having 7 different cards, you have 3 different possibilities of the outcome.
(You can apply this to all sorts of possibilities, like getting a 5 or higher would be the totals of the 5, 6 & 7, etc.)
Try putting that together and see if you can go from there.
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Junior Member
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Oct 21, 2009, 10:55 PM
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 Originally Posted by morgaine300
Think of it like this:
There's .05 probability of getting the 5. That gets you $100
There's .24 probability of getting the 2 or the 7. (.08 + .16) That gets you $10.
Now, what's the probability of getting nothing? If you get a 1, 3, 4 or 6. What's the probability of getting any of those?
That is basically in the end your three possibilities of what will happen. If you add the probabilities together, then instead of having 7 different cards, you have 3 different possibilities of the outcome.
(You can apply this to all sorts of possibilities, like getting a 5 or higher would be the totals of the 5, 6 & 7, etc.)
Try putting that together and see if you can go from there.
While this is all correct, the main question is whether this is a winning game or losing game, so finding the probability of drawing the cards you want alone are not enough. Since different cards have different winning values.
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Uber Member
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Oct 23, 2009, 12:04 AM
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I never said it was enough. It was a hint to get the person started. It's the concept of not doing peoples homework for them.
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