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9 May, 00:33

Gambles are independent, and each one results in the player being equally likely to win or lose 1 unit. Let W denote the net winnings of a gambler whose strategy is to stop gambling immediately after his first win. Find (a) P{W>0}, (b) P{W<0}, (c) E[W]

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  1. 9 May, 01:21
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    a) P{W>0} = 0.5

    b) P{W<0} = 0.5

    c) E[W] = 0

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Solution:

    a) P (W > 0) is 0.5 because there is a 0.5 chance the player will win on their first gamble and stop with a net profit.

    b) P (W = 0) is 0.25 because there is a 0.5 chance the player will lose on their first gamble, then also a 0.5 chance they will win on their second gamble and stop with a profit of 0.

    All other combinations of gambles result in a net loss, so P (W 0) - P (W = 0)

    c) The expected value can be obtained by summing the products of each profit and the probability of that profit. In this case, you have 1∗0.5+0∗0.25 + (-1) ∗0.125 + (-2) ∗0.0625, etc. So E (W) is the sum to infinity:

    = (1 - n) / 2^ (n + 1)

    = 0
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