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Chapter 2

1) This document discusses probability distributions and stochastic processes. It defines discrete random variables and their probability mass functions. It introduces several important discrete distributions including the Bernoulli, geometric, binomial, Pascal, discrete uniform, and Poisson distributions. 2) It also discusses properties of probability mass functions and cumulative distribution functions. It defines expected value and introduces the concepts of mode and median.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views40 pages

Chapter 2

1) This document discusses probability distributions and stochastic processes. It defines discrete random variables and their probability mass functions. It introduces several important discrete distributions including the Bernoulli, geometric, binomial, Pascal, discrete uniform, and Poisson distributions. 2) It also discusses properties of probability mass functions and cumulative distribution functions. It defines expected value and introduces the concepts of mode and median.

Uploaded by

Kami
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Probability and Stochastic Processes

Chapter 2 Discrete Random Variables

0-0
Random Variables
• Experiment: Procedure + Observations
• Observation is an outcome

• Assign a number to each outcome: Random variable

Defintion 2.1: A Random Variable is a function that assigns a real number


to each outcome in the sample space of the experiment.

1
Discrete Random Variables
• SX = range of X (set of possible values)
• X is discrete if SX is countable

• Discrete rv X has PMF

PX (x) = P [X = x]

2
Theorem 2.1 PMF Properties
For a discrete random variable X with PMF PX (x) and range SX :
• For any x, PX (x) ≥ 0

• x∈SX PX (x) = 1

• For B ⊂ SX ,

P [X ∈ B] = PX (x)
x∈B

3
Bernoulli rv
X is a Bernoulli random variable if the PMF of X has the form


⎨ 1−p x=0

PX (x) = p x=1



0 otherwise

where the parameter p is in the range 0 < p < 1.

4
Geometric rv
X is a geometric random variable if the PMF of X has the form

⎨ p(1 − p)x−1 x = 1, 2, . . .
PX (x) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

where the parameter p is in the range 0 < p < 1.

5
Geometric rv Example
Circuit rejected with prob p. Y is the number of tests up to and including the
first reject.

p r •Y =1 p r •Y =2 p r •Y =3
   
  
a a a ...
1−p 1−p 1−p

From the tree, P [Y = 1] = p, P [Y = 2] = p(1 − p),



⎨ p(1 − p)y−1 y = 1, 2, . . .
PY (y) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

6
Geometric: p = 0.2

⎨ (0.2)(0.8)y−1 y = 1, 2, . . .
PY (y) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

0.2

P (y)
0.1

Y
0
0 10 20
y

• Example 2.12 (MATLAB Demo)

7
Binomial (n, p) rv
X is a binomial (n, p) random variable if the PMF of X has the form

n x
PX (x) = p (1 − p)n−x x = 0, 1, . . . , n
x
where 0 < p < 1 and n is an integer such that n ≥ 1.

8
Binomial (n, p) rv Example
• Test n circuits, each circuit is rejected with probability p independent of
other tests.

• K = no. of rejects (a random variable)


• k is the number of rejects in n trials:

⎨ n pk (1 − p)n−k k = 0, 1, . . . , n
PK (k) = k
⎩ 0 otherwise

• Binomial Coin Experiment (Virtual Laboratories)

9
Pascal (k, p) rv
X is a Pascal (k, p) random variable if the PMF of X has the form

x−1 k
PX (x) = p (1 − p)x−k
k−1
where 0 < p < 1 and k is an integer such that k ≥ 1.

10
Pascal rv Example
• No. of tests, L, needed to find k rejects.

P [L = l] = P [AB]

• A = {k − 1 rejects in l − 1 tests}

• B = {reject on attempt l}
• Events A and B are independent

11
Pascal rv Example (continued)
• P [B] = p and P [A] is binomial:

P [A] = P [k − 1 rejects in l − 1 trials]



l − 1 k−1
= p (1 − p)l−1−(k−1)
k−1

PL (l) = P [AB] = P [A]P [B]



⎨ l−1 pk (1 − p)l−k l = k, k + 1, . . .
= k−1
⎩ 0 otherwise

12
Pascal: p = 0.2, k = 4

⎨ l−1
(0.2)4 (0.8)l−4 l = 4, 5, . . .
3
PL (l) =
⎩ 0 otherwise.

0.1
P (l)
0.05
L

0
0 10 20 30 40
l

13
Summary: Examples
• Bernoulli No. of succ. on one trial
• Binomial No. of succ on n trials

• Geometric No. of trials until first succ.

• Pascal No. of trials until succ k

14
Discrete Uniform rv
X is a discrete uniform random variable if the PMF of X has the form

⎨ 1/(l − k + 1) x = k, k + 1, k + 2, . . . , l
PX (x) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

where the parameters k and l are integers such that k < l.

15
Poisson rv
X is a Poisson random variable if the PMF of X has the form

⎨ αx e−α /x! x = 0, 1, 2, . . .
PX (x) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

where the parameter α is in the range α > 0.

16
Poisson rv Example
• Counts arrivals of something on interval time T .
• Arrival rate λ, interval time T .

• With α = λT ,

⎨ αx e−α /x! x = 0, 1, 2, . . .
PX (x) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

• Poisson Experiment (Virtual Laboratories)

17
Poisson: α = 0.5

⎨ (0.5)j e−0.5 /j! j = 0, 1, . . .
PJ (j) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

PJ(j)
0.5

0
0 2 4
j

18
Poisson: α = 5

⎨ 5j e−5 /j! j = 0, 1, . . .
PJ (j) =
⎩ 0 otherwise

0.2

P (j)
0.1

J 0
0 5 10 15
j

19
Binomial and Poisson Distributions
• Theorem 2.8: Perform n Bernoulli trials. In each trial, let the probability
of success be α/n, where α > 0 is a constant and n > α. Let the random
variable Kn be the number of successes in the n trials. As n → ∞,
PKn (k) converges to the PMF of a Poisson (α) random variable.

• Comparison of Binomial and Poisson Distributions (MATLAB Demo)

20
Cumulative Distribution Functions
• The cumulative distribution function (CDF) of random variable X is

FX (x) = P [X ≤ x]

21
CDF Example
1
1

P (r)

F (r)
0.5 0.5
R

R
0 0
−1 0 1 2 3 −1 0 1 2 3
r r

At the discontinuities r = 0 and r = 2, FR (r) is the upper values. (right


hand limit)

22
CDF Properties
For any discrete rv X with range SX = {x1 , x2 , . . .} satisfying
x1 ≤ x2 ≤ . . .,
• FX (−∞) = 0 and FX (∞) = 1

• For all x ≥ x, FX (x ) ≥ FX (x)


• For xi ∈ SX and , an arbitrarily small positive number,

FX (xi ) − FX (xi − ) = PX (xi )

• FX (x) = FX (xi ) for all x such that xi ≤ x < xi+1

23
CDF Properties
• Theorem 2.3: For all b ≥ a,

FX (b) − FX (a) = P [a < X ≤ b].

24
Expected Value
• The expected value of X is

E[X] = μX = xPX (x)
x∈SX

• Also called the average of X.

• A mode of X is a number xmod satisfying

PX (xmod ) ≥ PX (x) for all x.

• A median of X is a number that satisfies

P [X < xmed ] = P [X > xmed ].

25
Average vs. E[X]
1
n
• Average of n samples: mn = n i=1 x(i)
• Each x(i) ∈ SX . If each x ∈ SX occurs Nx times,
1   Nx 
mn = Nx x = x→ xPX (x)
n n
x∈SX x∈SX x∈SX

26
Derived Random Variables
• Each sample value y of a derived rv Y is a function g(x) of a sample
value x of a rv X: y = g(x)
• Notation: Y = g(X)

27
PMF of Y = g(X)

PY (y) = PX (x)
x:g(x)=y

28
Expected value of Y = g(X)
• Theorem 2.10: Given rv X with PMF PX (x), the expected value of
Y = g(X), is

E[Y ] = μY = E[g(X)] = g(x)PX (x)
x∈SX

• Example: Y = aX + b:

E[Y ] = (ax + b)PX (x) = aE[X] + b
x∈SX

29
Variance and Standard Deviation
• Variance: Y = (X − μX )2

E[Y ] = (x − μX )2 PX (x) = Var [X] = σX
2

x∈SX

• Variance measures spread of PMF

• Standard Deviation: σX = Var [X]


• Units of σX are the same as X.

• Theorem 2.13:
2
 
Var [X] = E X − μ2X =E X 2
− (E[X])2 .

30
Properties of the variance
• If Y = aX + b, Var [Y ] = a2 Var [X].

31
Moments
For random variable X,

• The n-th moment is E[X n ]

• The n-th central moment is E[(X − μX )n ]

32
Conditional PMF of X given B
• Definition 2.19: Given the event B, with P [B] > 0, the conditional PMF
of X is
PX|B (x) = P [X = x|B]

• Theorem 2.17:

P [X = x, B] ⎨
X P (x)
x∈B
P [B]
PX|B (x) = =
P [B] ⎩ 0 otherwise

33
Conditional PMF Example
Example: X is geometric with p = 0.1. What is the conditional PMF of X
given event B that X > 9?

34
Conditional PMFs

Theorem 2.16: A random variable X with event space {B1 , B2 , . . . , Bm }


has PMF
m
PX (x) = PX|Bi (x) P [Bi ]
i=1
.

35
Theorem 2.18
• For any x ∈ B, PX|B (x) ≥ 0

• x∈B PX|B (x) = 1

• For any event C ⊂ B, P [C|B], the conditional probability that X is in


the set C, is

P [C|B] = PX|B (x)
x∈C

36
Conditional Expectations
• Replace PX (x) with PX|B (x)

• E[X|B] = x xPX|B (x)

• Theorem 2.19: For event space {B1 , B2 , · · · , Bm },



m
E[X] = E[X|Bi ] P [Bi ].
i=1

• Theorem 2.20: E[g(X)|B] = g(x)PX|B (x)
x
2

• Var [X|B] = E (X − E[X|B]) |B

• Die Coin Experiment (Virtual Laboratories)


• Coin Die Experiment (Virtual Laboratories)

37
Virtual Laboratories
• Binomial Coin Experiment
• Poisson Experiment

• Die Coin Experiment

• Coin Die Experiment

38
Chapter Summary
• Discrete random variables, CDF, and PMF PX (x)
• A function of a random variable Y = g(X)

• Expectation and variance

• Conditional PMF PX|B (x) and conditional expectation E[X|B]

39

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