Probability theory etc

0007

Senior member
Messages
2,377
Likes
664
Last edited by a moderator:
One major point that came out from this talk was how counter-intuitive probability theory is. Some lessons there for trading perhaps? eg - isn't it difficult to believe and act upon the facts and what you see happening, rather than what you think or want should happen.

No new lessons there then. Just need to work on my mental discipline!

(prog is normally available for "listen again" on BBC website - though it's still got last week's at present).
 
Way over my head but interesting that statistically you only need 23 people in the same room to have a good chance of 2 of those people having the same birthday. But 250 people to have to be in that room for a better than evens chance of someone else having the same birthday as yourself.
 
Way over my head but interesting that statistically you only need 23 people in the same room to have a good chance of 2 of those people having the same birthday. But 250 people to have to be in that room for a better than evens chance of someone else having the same birthday as yourself.

most of probability theory is relatively easy. When you get Stochastic processes, Martingales, queuing, diffusion processes, percolation's etc. . . . then things can get pretty intense.

Also there are counter intuitive paradoxes about protocols that you see in probability theory (see prisoner's paradox) and also other famous paradoxes like Simpson's paradox.
 
Sounds like there will be an interesting prog on subject topic Radio 4 @ 9.00 (8.00GMT) by prof Marcus de Sautoy - he's generally worth a listen and good on the maths of music.

On now!

very good. just listened to it. (y)

one clever example is the one about getting 5 heads, and how people "feel" that the next one has to be a tail, as "its due a turn".
imagine instead of flipping the coin, you put it in a box and lock it away for 20 years.
open the box after 20 years and then ask "do you still think the next one is due a tail"?

gets people to think how the coin cant have a memory, and how people connect things when there is no actual connection.
 
. . .

one clever example is the one about getting 5 heads, and how people "feel" that the next one has to be a tail, as "its due a turn".

. . .

gets people to think how the coin cant have a memory, and how people connect things when there is no actual connection.

Actually, when you make that (of the order of) 10 heads in a row, what's the chances of the next one also coming up heads the answer is actually >99%.

Why?


Because the chances of that happening (ie 11 heads in a row) are far less than the chances that a mistake was made and a rigged coin was used. (serious)
 
Actually, when you make that (of the order of) 10 heads in a row, what's the chances of the next one also coming up heads the answer is actually >99%.

Why?


Because the chances of that happening (ie 11 heads in a row) are far less than the chances that a mistake was made and a rigged coin was used. (serious)

the chance of getting another head GIVEN that 10 heads have already occurred is STILL one half, it does not matter what has happened before.

However to get 11 heads in a row is 1 in 2048. Coin tossing is a stochastic process, known as a Markov Chain.

And to prove something is rigged is rather (how shall we say) "difficult". You can never really be "certain", but you can say with 98% or 99% that something is rigged and that should about resolve it. The reason for this is because you are using probabilistic tools/measures on a probabilistic system, hence your answer cannot be deterministic in that sense.
 
The coin toss theory has been many an interesting and argumentative discussion.

Even if you flick 15 heads in a row, lock it up for years or do it in 5 minutes, use the same person or 15 different people, the odds on the next flip is still 50-50.

This is because the coin has no memory....but...

Law of odds do,

therefore over whatever time, by whoever, the coin will become closer to 50-50 the more times it is flicked...so

If you've had many heads in a row, at some time, not necessarily the next flip or the next several but at some time/flick/event it will have to pull in (close to) the equal amount of tails.

(this even includes whether one side is decimally heavier than the other)

The same rules apllies to the Roulette table, even though they have 1 green/neutral or 2 on european tables, this is why they have a minimum outside bet rule followed by a maximum to prevent people from (constantly)winning this way. This swings the odds in the houses favour by around 2%, this means that you will win small amounts most of the time, but at some point the ball will give 12 reds/blacks busting the player.

(above example uses doubling up method and is proved to work - scientifically and actually, hence why casino's have moved the goal posts to prevent it)
 
Law of odds do,

therefore over whatever time, by whoever, the coin will become closer to 50-50 the more times it is flicked...so

If you've had many heads in a row, at some time, not necessarily the next flip or the next several but at some time/flick/event it will have to pull in (close to) the equal amount of tails.

(this even includes whether one side is decimally heavier than the other)

No they don't. You are confusing this with the Strong Law of Large Numbers. All that's happening is the probability "settling" down to its equilibrium point - even if it is a biased equilibrium point. The latter reason is why casinos regularly change roulette wheels.

By the way, I really don't think you need to know much, if any, probability theory to be a successful trader, so lets end this discussion now.
 
What was the show called btw?

Listen again here: BBC - Homepage Click on radio 4 / listen again Show called:

In Our Time (45 min)
Broadcast on Radio 4 Thu 29 May - 09:00
Probability: Melvyn Bragg is joined by Marcus Du Sautoy and Colva Roney Dougal. The idea of capturing the likelihood of events in a mathematical model is a modern development.
Download this show
More info about this show
Email this show to a friend
Listen using stand-alone Real Player
================================

With appropriate software you can save any BBC radio prog to mp3 file and listen on ipod or cd in car
 
No they don't. You are confusing this with the Strong Law of Large Numbers. All that's happening is the probability "settling" down to its equilibrium point - even if it is a biased equilibrium point. The latter reason is why casinos regularly change roulette wheels.

By the way, I really don't think you need to know much, if any, probability theory to be a successful trader, so lets end this discussion now.

isn't the central limit theorem more appropriate?
 
Yes, and it's crude and elementary at best - sorry. He trades on betfair doesn't he?

It was written several years ago and was not designed to be an academic treatise, more an introduction to probability for the uninitiated :)
 
No they don't. You are confusing this with the Strong Law of Large Numbers. All that's happening is the probability "settling" down to its equilibrium point - even if it is a biased equilibrium point. The latter reason is why casinos regularly change roulette wheels.

By the way, I really don't think you need to know much, if any, probability theory to be a successful trader, so lets end this discussion now.

Very interesting broadcast, thanks for this 0007.

Temptrader, Have a listen and post what you think. I'm sure you'll find it argumentative at it's least.
Now shall we end the conversation with the broadcast and get back to trading. :cheesy:
 
Top