The question seems to be asking:A family has 2 children. What is the probability that one of them is a girl, given one is a boy?This is equivalent to:What fraction of families with exactly 2 children and at least 1 boy (B), have exactly 1 boy (A)?This is very revealing. Applying what we know about conditional probability:(A) The probability that a family with 2 children has exactly 1 boy is 2/4 (BG, GB, but not BB, GG)(B) The probability that a family with 2 children has AT LEAST 1 boy is 3/4 (BB, BG, GB, but not GG)(A intersect B) This is equivalent to event A (At least 1 boy AND exactly 1 boy)P(A|B) = P(A intersect B) / P(B) = (2/4)/(3/4) = 2/3Look at it this way:In a family of 4, the expected distribution of children would be 2 girls and 2 boys (regardless of the age distribution). From the perspective of one of the boys 2/3 of his siblings are girls. The converse is true from the perspective of a girl.
9/13/2007 3:08:45 PM
This shouldn't be conditional probability, though. The outcome of A does not influence or have any bearing on the outcome of B. So one child is a boy (the king). The probability that the second child is a girl is still 50%. It doesn't magically go up to 66% because the first child was a boy.[Edited on September 13, 2007 at 6:56 PM. Reason : .]
9/13/2007 6:54:32 PM
2/3. Take it from someone who has done this very question before.
9/13/2007 7:41:35 PM
^ read it again. IF the king is the elder sibling, THEN there is a 50% chance his younger sibling will be G.IF the king is the younger sibling, THEN there is a 50% chance his younger sibling will be G....now tell me how you get 66.6% from that.
9/13/2007 8:04:41 PM
your reasoning is nice, but the fatal flaw in it is that BB gets counted twice.so essentially you are looking at:BBBB (again)BGGBand so there is a girl 2/4 times = 50%but the correct way is to write out the sample space:BBBGGBGGGG is out, and the current situation could be either of the first three.of those first three (BB, BG, GB), we have a girl 2/3 of the times.that's the answer that any math prof would give. i am certain of it enough to bet large amouts of money on it.(you can also do it as a conditional probability question: P(one child is G | one child is B) = 0.5/0.75 = 2/3)
9/13/2007 8:19:10 PM
^^ You're missing the point entirely. You don't know if the king is the younger or older sibling, so you have to take into account both the probability he has an older sister and the probability he has a younger sister. Because you know there are only two siblings, it doesn't matter if he has a brother who is younger or older. The fourth possible outcome of GG isn't possible in this situation isn't possible because you know the king is male. Therefore the correct probability that his sibling is his sister is P(sister) = 2 outcomes where sibling is sister / 3 possible outcomes. Hence 2/3.
9/13/2007 10:19:14 PM
^, ^^bah.
9/13/2007 11:17:46 PM
shit's retarded. poorly worded question. are we asking about two children in a family or a single sibling?
9/13/2007 11:22:29 PM
1st 2nd has boy? has girl? has both?G G 1 # with a m child: 298G G 1 # with a m+f child: 197B G 1 1 1G G 1 Fraction of males that 0.66G B 1 1 1 have sisters:B B 1B B 1B G 1 1 1G G 1
9/14/2007 3:36:21 AM
i find your ideas intriguing and i would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
9/14/2007 11:07:26 AM
^^ GG on simulating this dude.Yup, any time there is a probability problem that causes problems, the best way to find the solution is by simulation in Excel. Like that Monty Python problem with the 3 doors, and a prize behind one of them. The one that caused massive worldwide controversy a decade or so ago.I got this pm from someone. Posting it here so that everybody can benefit:*******************************************************************Hey, why are you taking bothQuote : "BG, GB" into account? Birth order is not part of the problem, so they are equivalent. Also, this problem can be proven false empirically. In all families with one boy, the next child born always has .5 chance. If that werent true, the world's pop wouldnt be 50/50 boy girl, which it is. *******************************************************************And the answer is BECAUSE birth order is not part of the problem. We don't know if the King is older or the younger sibling, so we have to count both possibilities.Or as someone just recently said:
9/14/2007 12:35:24 PM
Indeed, the fraction males that were the oldest that have a sister in the above simulation is half. The reason the probability changes is you put another condition on the space that eliminates all doubt about one of the children.Now let's say you want to consider birth order because the first son is heir to the throne. The answer is NO DIFFERENT. He comes from a family with 2 boys with 1/3 probability, or BG with 2/3 probability.^ The problem you're referring to is the MONY HALL problem (not Monty Python) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Hall_problem
9/14/2007 2:15:53 PM
Haha yeah, Monty Hall, not Monty Python BTW, the answer will be 0.5 ONLY IF you are told that the King was the first child, or the second child, i.e., you are told which number child he is.
9/14/2007 5:35:15 PM
double post[Edited on September 14, 2007 at 5:36 PM. Reason : ]
9/14/2007 5:35:41 PM
^^ Yes, that is, indeed, correct. Only if you eliminate all doubt about the the king himself does the probability become 50%.
9/14/2007 5:59:23 PM
9/14/2007 8:45:34 PM
no. 2/3 is right. if you got up to say 100 guys that are in a two sibling family and be like "hey do you got a sister?", tally up the numbers. about 2/3 of them will say yes. simple survey. or you can just figure it out mathematically and say 2/3.
9/14/2007 9:04:11 PM
you know what?i dont like your statistics.I'm going to invent a new branch of statistics.I'll call it Joestistics.
9/15/2007 12:28:42 AM
9/15/2007 4:48:16 AM
i have a confession to make.i had one ST class required for my major. (ST 371, i think)i went the first week, then didnt show up again til final exam.i accepted the C- and moved along.
9/16/2007 3:29:20 PM
so your grade was only based on 1 final exam? no tests? good job.[Edited on September 16, 2007 at 7:39 PM. Reason : final]
9/16/2007 7:39:14 PM
i know i missed a few tests, which forced me to have the final weighed heavier. and there was no graded HW. but yeah, maybe i did show up for one test during the semester. thanks for keeping score.
9/16/2007 10:34:08 PM
np, its what i do
9/16/2007 10:44:05 PM
^^^^ j00 R PWNT
9/16/2007 11:53:36 PM
pwnt? haha no way.this just gives me more credibility when I submit my "Joestistics" to the journals.
9/17/2007 9:15:49 AM
I agree - the plane will not take off. :-)[Edited on September 17, 2007 at 7:03 PM. Reason : Edited to remove all probability discussion, since this question is so screwy and requires way too m]
9/17/2007 6:58:18 PM
^nope, got the homework back today. we were right, 2/3.
9/17/2007 7:03:42 PM
you should dispute the grade, and submit this thread to the office of Academic Integrity as evidence.
9/17/2007 8:25:34 PM
why dispute? i got it right
9/17/2007 11:35:01 PM
i say you got it wrong.
9/18/2007 2:03:01 AM
1/2
9/18/2007 3:49:18 AM
anyone who STILL believes the answer is 1/2 after i repeatedly and clearly showed why the answer is 2/3, should promptly kill himself (or herself as the case may be) for failing at life.
9/18/2007 12:57:25 PM
YOUR statistics shows it's 2/3, yes.JOESTISTICS shows it's 1/2.i'll be submitting a formal paper to the journals shortly. stay tuned.
9/18/2007 1:00:57 PM
anybody who still thinks the plane will not take off is a retard.
9/18/2007 5:21:21 PM
^ The plane obviously did take off a few days ago, and rosschilen obviously missed it.
9/18/2007 9:18:03 PM
monty python problem
9/18/2007 10:01:48 PM
mount my python problem
9/18/2007 10:07:06 PM
vpython problem
9/19/2007 11:34:05 AM
you guys can twist and turn this problem as much as you want, but you have to look at it how its worded. How its worded, the answer is 100%. If you think about it in real terms, the answer in 50%. Order is never mentioned so its not 67%
9/19/2007 12:04:52 PM
To anybody still confused by the 2/3 answer:Do you agree that out of all families with two children, having a boy and a girl is twice is likely as having two boys?25% of all such families have two boys.25% of all such families have two girls.50% of all such families have a boy and a girl.Therefore, if there's at least one boy in such a family, his sibling is twice as likely to be a sister than a brother.
9/19/2007 1:03:10 PM
^ i was going to write some smartass comment about 'welcome to last week' ... but actually thats a REALLY good, and concise, explanation. [Edited on September 19, 2007 at 1:30 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2007 1:24:10 PM
9/19/2007 4:30:41 PM
i haven't read this thread, but i have a feeling that whatever 0EPII1 suggests is off basehttp://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=489649
9/19/2007 4:57:44 PM
^no, what he posted is, in fact, entirely correct. also, his statement that for the set 1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4, the mode is a meaningless quantity (whether it exists by definition or not) is also correct.
9/19/2007 4:59:17 PM
^^ Yea, except that everybody (including all professors) agree with what I am saying (and vice versa), save for a couple of molasses-brained folks.So maybe you should read the thread before you make yourself appear foolish/vindictive.[Edited on September 19, 2007 at 5:02 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2007 5:01:04 PM
in the set {1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4} there are 4 modes {1,2,3,4} however, in this case (and many others), while the mode exists by definition, it is an entirely meaningless quantity, which is why the confusion arises. the only time the mode(s) can be interpreted as having significance is when the number of modes is small compared to the cardinality of the set ]
9/19/2007 5:04:17 PM
^^ i heard you still piss the bed.[Edited on September 19, 2007 at 5:05 PM. Reason : damn, three seconds ]
9/19/2007 5:04:20 PM
1 - Umm, ok? What does that have to do with this thread?2 - You heard wrong. I don't still piss the bed.3 - Shut up or I will piss in your butt.^^ 1st sentence: exactly2nd sentence: i would change it to "much smaller than the cardinality of the set". for example, for 1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4,5 the modes are 1,2,3,4. and still, quite meaningless.[Edited on September 19, 2007 at 5:15 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2007 5:11:06 PM
[Edited on September 19, 2007 at 5:15 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2007 5:14:42 PM
i know i started this thread, but it needs to die. people who think it is 50% are going to be wrong and stick with it, but just let this thread die.
9/19/2007 6:59:06 PM