August 2025

Probability – L03.8 Independence Versus Pairwise Independence

We will now consider an example that illustrates the difference between the notion of independence of a collection of events and the notion of pairwise independence within that collection. The model is simple. We have a fair coin which we flip twice. So at each flip, there is probability 1/2 of obtaining heads. Furthermore, we …

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Probability – L03.6 Independence Versus Conditional Independence

We have already seen an example in which we have two events that are independent but become dependent in a conditional model. So that [independence] and conditional independence is not the same. We will now see another example in which a similar situation is obtained. The example is as follows. We have two possible coins, …

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Probability – L03.5 Conditional Independence

Conditional probabilities are like ordinary probabilities, except that they apply to a new situation where some additional information is available. For this reason, any concept relevant to probability models has a counterpart that applies to conditional probability models. In this spirit, we can define a notion of conditional independence, which is nothing but the notion …

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