Comments for The Science of Magic »
Posted By pumpthejam4478 1 year, 2 months ago in Science & TechnologyWe are all grown to believe that flipping a coin in the air will result in 50% chance of getting “heads” or “tails”.Coin toss became the standard example of a random event in probability courses, but a study on the Dynamical Bias in the Coin Toss proved otherwise.
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Wolfie20071 year, 2 months ago
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Hey, pump, great article, I always suspected that a coin toss wasn't even odds. My older brother used to flip a coin to see who would wash and who would dry the dishes. I had to wash 7 out 10 times or more. I think I'll send this to him. lol Thanks for posting and sending.
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Wolfie20071 year, 2 months ago
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FTA
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We are all grown to believe that flipping a coin in the air will result in 50% chance of getting “heads” or “tails”. Coin toss became the standard example of a random event in probability courses, but a study by Persi Diaconis, Susan Holmes, and Richard Montgomery on the Dynamical Bias in the Coin Toss proved otherwise. Turns out that the chance of a coin falling on the same side it started on is 0.51, and, respectively, there’s a 0.49 chance that it will fall on the other side. At first this difference might seem insignificant, but in the long run this kind of differences is what makes gamblers lose a lot of money to casinos. The full article is available here, and even though extensive knowledge of physics is required to fully comprehend it, there's still something satisfying in riffling through the pages in an attempt to understand the models, vectors and the long formulas. -
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