Re: Coin flipping puzzler - my solution
Faux Pas, on host 68.32.218.102
Sunday, September 14, 2003, at 22:11:31
Re: Coin flipping puzzler - my solution posted by gremlinn on Sunday, September 14, 2003, at 12:06:58:
> > Here's a math puzzle that's a lot easier to solve than it might seem at first. Can anyone do it? > > > > A number p is picked (by someone else) at random from a uniform distribution on the interval (0,1). Then a coin is crafted which, when tossed, results in heads with probability p and tails with probability 1-p. The coin is given to us without us being told what p is, and we have no way of deducing any additional information on the value of p besides experimentation. > > > > Given what we know, and since the problem's symmetric with respect to heads/tails, the chance of getting a heads is 1/2 on the first flip. I.e., we're 50% confident of getting heads when we're just about to make the first flip. > > > > The question is this: if we keep flipping the coin and getting heads, after which flip do we become 99% confident (or higher) that the next flip will also be heads? > > The trick I used was...
[eighty-four paragraphs about math snipped]
Uh... yeah. "A lot easier to solve than it might seem." Sure.
-Faux "You sort of lost me after 'The trick I used was...'" Pas.
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