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Okay, so there is a special species of frog. It is impossible for you to tell the difference between the males and females, however male frogs croak and females do not. You hear a croak and then see two frogs sitting together. What is the probability that one of them is a female? Have a look at the TED-Ed video and see what you think:
So my question to you is which of the above is correct?
My answer ...
Neither, but TED-Ed is closer. Let's start with the premise that before hearing a croak there are FOUR possible pairs of frogs:
1. Boy, Boy
2. Boy, Girl
3. Girl, Boy
4. Girl, Girl
Once we hear a croak then possibility 4 is eliminated, however we also have to consider the further probabilities that happen.
There is an equal possibility of starting from these conditions:
1. Boy, Boy
2. Boy, Girl
3. Girl, Boy
The Boy-Boy pair can either:
1. Both croak
2. Frog1 croaks
3. Frog2 croaks
4. Neither croaks
And the other two pairs each have these two possibilities:
1. Boy frog croaks
2. Boy frog doesn't croak
So now we can see that there are four possible outcomes for the boy-boy pair. However there is a big unknown in this calculation: what is the probability that a male frog would croak in the time that you have been there? So let's put in a few values and see what happens. First let's imagine Pr(.1) - that is a 10%chance that a male frog would croak:
Pair 2
1. Boy frog croaks ....Pr(.5) = 0.5
2. Boy frog doesn't croak ....Pr(.5) = 0.5
Pair 3
1. Boy frog croaks ....Pr(.5) = 0.5
2. Boy frog doesn't croak ....Pr(.5) = 0.5
Now this calculation looks more like TED-Ed:
Boy-Boy ....Pr(.5/1.5) = 33.3%
Pair with a girl ....Pr(1/1.5) = 66.7%
Talwalkar's criticism would be true if the four stating conditions were equally likely, however we can show that they are not. The probability is dependant on the population spread at the start of the sample: for example let's say you had 400 male frogs, and 400 females, and paired them up randomly. The probability of male-male pairs remains the same before and after you hear croaking coming from some of your 400 pairs, and if you wait long enough eventually all the pairs with at least one male will croak. The fact that you've heard a croak doesn't suddenly double the number of available male-male pairs to hear in the set of 400 pairs - there should still be about 100 pairs.
For Religion & Health see:[/b][/size] Williams & Sternthal. (2007). Spirituality, religion and health: Evidence and research directions. Med. J. Aust., 186(10), S47-S50.-LINK
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I think I don't get statistics, because the 67% seems like BS to me.
It's like, if I heard that someone in a room flipped a coin and got heads, I wouldn't go into a two-coin room thinking the chances of the 2nd coin being either state would be different than 50%.
April 22, 2016 at 11:39 am (This post was last modified: April 22, 2016 at 11:42 am by ErGingerbreadMandude.)
If there were two male frogs wouldn't there have been two croaks?
I'm just saying this because if someone is going to assume a single croak equals a single male frog then isn't it reasonable to assume two croaks means two frogs? If there is only one croak then doesn't that mean there is only one male frog?
(April 22, 2016 at 11:07 am)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote: One of the possibilities can be eliminated because there cannot be two females. 2/3 =~ 67%
Yeah I see, you are assigning ordinal values to the two frogs:
MM
MF
FM
But this seems too virtual for me, since it doesn't matter which frog is the first or second. So I see it as:
MM
MF
The not-calling frog, whichever one it happens to be, is either male or female. So you can put that guy in the first slot, and your left with only one frog to think about.
(April 22, 2016 at 11:42 am)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote: No. A single croak only means that there is necessarily at least one male.
Yes, that's what I'm saying. A single croak meaning a single male frog implies a double croak meaning two frogs.
How do you know there were two frogs and they croaked simultaneously making it sound like a single croak?