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Researchers at the University of Amsterdam analyzed the probability of a coin toss and found that it is not exactly 50/50.
Thus, if we toss a coin once and get the side S we wanted, the formula would read P(S) = 1/2. Joint probability measures the likelihood of two events occurring together and at the same point in time.
Researchers were hoping to get an answer to the question: "If you flip a fair coin and catch it in hand, what's the probability it lands on the same side it started?" Yeti Studio - stock.adobe.com ...
Flipping a coin is often the initial example used to help teach probability and statistics to maths students. Often, there is talk of how, given a fair coin, the probability of landing heads or ...