The Mean

The value you expect to get in a statistical experiment is the mean. If you toss a coin 10 times, you expect to get 5 heads and 5 tails. The mean is often called the "expected value" or the "expectation value". You expect this value because the probability of getting "heads" is 0.5 and if you toss 10 times you should get 5. To formalize this particular example of the mean, if p is the probability and n the number of events, then the mean is a = np. This is the form of the mean when the probability can be expressed by the binomial distribution.

To formalize the concept a bit more, if for an experiment with discrete outcomes xi for which the probability is P(xi), then the mean is given by

a = ΣxiP(xi)

For the case of continuous variables where the probability is expressed in terms of a distribution function, the mean takes the form


Mean particle energy from Boltzmann distribution
Mean value for binomial distribution
Mean lifetime for particle decay
Index

Applied statistics concepts
 
HyperPhysics*****HyperMath*****AlgebraR Nave
Go Back







The Mean of the Binomial Distribution

The mean value of the binomial distribution is a = np where n is the number of events and p is the probability for each event.

Binomial distribution:Mean:

This seems a very simple expression for the mean of such a complicated function, but the result agrees with our intuition. If you throw a die, hoping to throw a "2", then the probability is 1/6. If you throw it 6 times, you would expect to get one throw with value "2". The mean or expected value for 6 throws is (1/6)(6) = 1. For such a simple expression, the proof that it is in fact the mean is rather involved. The following approach is after Appendix D of Rohlf's Modern Physics.

From the definition of the mean using a distribution function, the binomial mean is

The goal is to reduce this expression to just np. Since the first term in the sum is zero, since x=0, we can replace the sum with a sum starting from 1.

Now cancel the common factor of x appearing in numerator and denominator.

Since the summation index is a dummy variable, we make the change of variables x' = x - 1.

Now factor out np.

The terms in the summation above are just the binomial function for n-1 trials, and you are summing it over all values of x - so that sum must be just 1. The expression then reduces to the desired expression for the mean.

Mean of the
binomial distribution.

Since the Gaussian and Poisson distributions are approximations to the binomial distribution, this expression for the mean applies to them as well.

Index

Applied statistics concepts

Reference
Rohlf
App. D.
 
HyperPhysics*****HyperMath*****AlgebraR Nave
Go Back