16
Review of Probability

Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Review of Probability

Page 2: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Definitions (1)

Event space: pretty much any set of things, we’ll usually call it E if we have to refer to it.

Random variable: a variable whose possible values are taken from an event space. Usually denoted with a capital letter.

Probability distribution: a function P with event space E is a probability distribution if it has these properties:

1. 2.3.

Page 3: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Quiz

1. Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}.

If the probability P(X=H) is 0.5, what is P(X=T)?

2. If P(X=H)=0.25, what is P(X=T)?

Page 4: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Definitions (2)

Joint distribution: A probability distribution of two or more random variables. The event space for this distribution is the cross product of the event space of the individual random variables.

E.g. Let X1 be a random variable for a coin flip. Let X2 be a random variable for a second coin flip.

P(X1, X2) is a joint distribution over all possible values for both coin flips.

Page 5: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Quiz

How many events are in the event space for flipping two coins?

Name two of these events.

Page 6: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Definitions (3)

Marginal distribution: This is just any probability distribution, but people use it to refer to a distribution over one variable when they’ve separately introduced a joint distribution over that variable and a second variable.

E.g., if I have a joint distribution P(X1, X2), then P(X1) is a marginal distribution over X1, and P(X2) is a marginal distribution over X2.

Page 7: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Important Equation

Marginalization rule, or rule of Total Probability:

This rule gives a way of figuring out a marginal distribution from a joint distribution.

Page 8: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Definitions (4)

Conditional distribution: A conditional distribution over random variable X given random variable Y is written as P(X|Y=e), and is defined as:

Notice that in this conditional distribution, the probabilities for X need to sum to one.

Confusingly, people often say that P(X|Y) is a conditional distribution. However, this is actually a family of many different probability distributions, one for each value of Y.

Page 9: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Important Equation (2)

Marginalization rule, or rule of Total Probability,Second Version:

Really just the same as before, but written slightly differently.

Page 10: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Definitions (5)

Independence: Random variables X and Y are independent (denoted ) if:

P(X, Y) = P(X)P(Y), for all possible events

Conditional Independence: Random variables X and Y are conditionally independent given random variable Z (denoted ) if:

P(X, Y|Z) = P(X|Z)P(Y|Z), for all possible events

Page 11: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Quiz

1. Suppose I flip a coin 3 times. Each time has P(H)=0.5. Assume the three coin tosses are independent. What is P(H, H, H)?

2. Suppose I flip the coin 4 times, and let the random variable for the i-th time be Xi. What is P(X1=X2=X3=X4)?

3. What is the probability that, in 4 coin flips, I get at least 3 heads?

Page 12: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Quiz

Suppose I have one normal coin (P(X1=H)=0.5), and one weird coin with the following properties:

P(X2=H|X1=H)=0.9

P(X2=T|X1=T)=0.8

If I flip X1 and then X2, what is P(X2=H)?

Page 13: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Important Equations so farComplementarity:

Conditional Probability:

Marginalization (or total probability):

or:

Common Mistake: The following looks like the complementarity rule, but there is no guarantee that it is true, and quite often it will not be true:

Very bad, don’t do this:

Page 14: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Quiz: DiabetesP(D)=0.01 (called the prior probability)Test for diabetes is either + or –P(+|D)=0.9P(-|D)=0.8

P(-|D) =P(+|D) =

P(+, D) =P(-, D) =P(+, D) =P(-, D) =

P(D|+) =

Page 15: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Bayes Rule

Bayes Rule:

or:

Proof of Bayes Rule:1. (def. of cond. prob.)2. (also def. of cond. prob.)3. (multiply both sides of step 2 by P(Y))4. (substitute LHS of step 3 into numerator of step 1)

Likelihood

Prior

Marginal Likelihood

Posterior

Page 16: Review of Probability. Definitions (1) Quiz 1.Let’s say I have a random variable X for a coin, with event space {H, T}. If the probability P(X=H) is

Bayes Rule for Diabetes Test

P(D|+) = ?