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Probability Theory. Part 1: Basic Concepts. Sample Space - Events. Sample Point The outcome of a random experiment Sample Space S The set of all possible outcomes Discrete and Continuous Events A set of outcomes, thus a subset of S Certain, Impossible and Elementary. Set Operations.
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Probability Theory Part 1: Basic Concepts
Sample Space - Events • Sample Point • The outcome of a random experiment • Sample Space S • The set of all possible outcomes • Discrete and Continuous • Events • A set of outcomes, thus a subset of S • Certain, Impossible and Elementary
Set Operations • Union • Intersection • Complement • Properties • Commutation • Associativity • Distribution • De Morgan’s Rule S
Axioms If If A1, A2, … are pairwise exclusive Corollaries Axioms and Corollaries
Computing Probabilities Using Counting Methods • Sampling With Replacement and Ordering • Sampling Without Replacement and With Ordering • Permutations of n Distinct Objects • Sampling Without Replacement and Ordering • Sampling With Replacement and Without Ordering
Conditional Probability • Conditional Probability of event A given that event B has occurred • If B1, B2,…,Bn a partition of S, then (Law of Total Probability) S B1 B2 A B3
Bayes’ Rule • If B1, …, Bn a partition of S then Example Which input is more probable if the output is 1? A priori, both input symbols are equally likely. input 0 1 1-p p output 0 1 0 1 1-ε ε ε 1-ε
Event Independence A B • Events A and B are independentif • If two events have non-zero probability and are mutually exclusive, then they cannot be independent 1 1 ½ ½ C 1 ½ 1 1 ½ ½ 1
Sequences of Independent Experiments E1, E2, …, Ej experiments A1, A2, …, Aj respective events Independent if Bernoulli Trials Test whether an event A occurs (success – failure) What is the probability of k successes in n independent repetitions of a Bernoulli trial? Transmission over a channel with ε = 10-3 and with 3-bit majority vote Sequential Experiments