354 PART 7 The Part of Tens
The Binomial Distribution
The binomial distribution helps you estimate the probability of getting x successes
out of N independent tries when the probability of success on one try is p. (See
Chapter 3 for an introduction to probability.) A common example of the binomial
distribution is the probability of getting x heads out of N flips of a coin. If the coin
is fair, p = 0.5, but if it is lopsided, p could be greater than or less than 0.5 (such
as p = 0.7). Figure 24-4 shows the frequency distributions of three binomial dis-
tributions, all having p
0 7. but having different N values.
The formula for the probability of getting x successes in N tries when the proba-
bility of success on one try is p is Pr
,
,
1
! /
!
!
(
x N p
p
N
x N
x
N
x
)
)
[
p x
.
Looking across Figure 24-4, you might have guessed that as N gets larger, the
binomial distribution’s shape approaches that of a normal distribution with mean
Np and standard deviation
Np
p
(
)
1
.
FIGURE 24-3:
The log-normal
distribution.
© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
FIGURE 24-4:
The binomial
distribution.
© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.