4 Discrete Probability Distribution
4 Discrete Probability Distribution
4 Discrete Probability Distribution
DISCRETE PROBABILITY
DISTRIBUTION
• A probability distribution refers to the arrangement of the values of a random variable and the
probabilities assigned to them
• A discrete probability distribution is a list of probabilities for each of the possible outcomes
in an experiment. It gives the probability for each of the possible value of a discrete random
variable. Also, it should satisfy two properties called the: (1) nonnegative property and (2)
norming property.
Nonnegative Property: The probability p(x) for each possible value is between 0 and 1
inclusive. In symbols,
Norming Property: The sum of all the probabilities in the distribution is equal to 1. In
symbols,
• The discrete probability distribution can be presented in tabular form, graphical form
(probability histogram), or a formula/function form (pmf: probability mass function).
COSTRUCTING DISCRETE
PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION
1) List all the possible values of the discrete random variable X.
2) Solve for the corresponding probability of each value of the discrete random variable X.
1/4
Reminder: In drawing a probability histogram, the width of the
bars/rectangles are the same and their heights vary depending on their
corresponding probabilities.
0 1 2 x
Example 1:
Moreover, discrete probability
x P(x)
distribution can also be presented in
formula/function form. The function 0 1/4
that represents a discrete probability 1 2/4 or 1/2
distribution is called probability
mass function (pmf). 2 1/4
Possible Outcomes
HH HH HT
HTT
TH
THT TTH TTT x P(x)
H T H H
0 1/8 - there is one (1) favorable outcome (HHH) out
of 8 possible outcomes
x (no. of tails) 0 1 1 2 1 2 2 3
1 3/8 - there are (3) favorable outcome (HHT, HTH,
THH) out of 8 possible outcomes
This table is the discrete probability distribution 2 3/8 - there are (3) favorable outcome (HTT, THT,
TTH) out of 8 possible outcomes
Take note that the table above satisfies the two properties of discrete probability distribution.
Nonnegative Property: 1/8 and 3/8 are positive values.
Norming Property: the sum of all the probabilities (1/8 + 3/8 + 3/8 + 1/8) is equal to 1.
Example 2:
{
𝒑 ( 𝒙 )= ¿ 𝟏/ 𝟖 , 𝒊𝒇 𝒙 =𝟎 ,𝟑
¿ 𝟑/ 𝟖 , 𝒊𝒇 𝒙=𝟏 ,𝟐
x
1 2 3 6
𝟏 4 5
𝒑 ( 𝒙 )= , 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒙=𝟏 , 𝟐 , 𝟑 ,𝟒 ,𝟓 , 𝟔 probability histogram
𝟔
probability mass function
Example 4:
A fair roulette wheel contains 30 numbers: 15 are blue, 10 are green, and 5 are yellow. You win Php 300 if the
roulette lands on a blue number; you lose Php 200 if the roulette lands on a green number; and you lose Php 100
if the roulette lands on a yellow number.
Experiment: “spinning the roulette wheel”
Random Variable: X = the amount (in Php) a player can win or lose
x P(x)
- there are ten (10) green numbers out of 30
-200 1/3 numbers. (Reduce to lowest terms)
- there are five (5) yellow numbers out of 30
-100 1/6 numbers. (Reduce to lowest terms)
The table above satisfies the two properties of discrete probability distribution.
Nonnegative Property: 1/6, 1/3, and ½ are positive values.
Norming Property: the sum of all the probabilities (1/3 + 1/6 + 1/2) is equal to 1.