.. _sec_prob:
Probability
===========
In some form or another, machine learning is all about making
predictions. We might want to predict the *probability* of a patient
suffering a heart attack in the next year, given their clinical history.
In anomaly detection, we might want to assess how *likely* a set of
readings from an airplane's jet engine would be, were it operating
normally. In reinforcement learning, we want an agent to act
intelligently in an environment. This means we need to think about the
probability of getting a high reward under each of the available
actions. And when we build recommender systems we also need to think
about probability. For example, say *hypothetically* that we worked for
a large online bookseller. We might want to estimate the probability
that a particular user would buy a particular book. For this we need to
use the language of probability. Entire courses, majors, theses,
careers, and even departments, are devoted to probability. So naturally,
our goal in this section is not to teach the whole subject. Instead we
hope to get you off the ground, to teach you just enough that you can
start building your first deep learning models, and to give you enough
of a flavor for the subject that you can begin to explore it on your own
if you wish.
We have already invoked probabilities in previous sections without
articulating what precisely they are or giving a concrete example. Let
us get more serious now by considering the first case: distinguishing
cats and dogs based on photographs. This might sound simple but it is
actually a formidable challenge. To start with, the difficulty of the
problem may depend on the resolution of the image.
.. _fig_cat_dog:
.. figure:: ../img/cat-dog-pixels.png
:width: 300px
Images of varying resolutions (:math:`10 \times 10`,
:math:`20 \times 20`, :math:`40 \times 40`, :math:`80 \times 80`, and
:math:`160 \times 160` pixels).
As shown in :numref:`fig_cat_dog`, while it is easy for humans to
recognize cats and dogs at the resolution of :math:`160 \times 160`
pixels, it becomes challenging at :math:`40 \times 40` pixels and next
to impossible at :math:`10 \times 10` pixels. In other words, our
ability to tell cats and dogs apart at a large distance (and thus low
resolution) might approach uninformed guessing. Probability gives us a
formal way of reasoning about our level of certainty. If we are
completely sure that the image depicts a cat, we say that the
*probability* that the corresponding label :math:`y` is "cat", denoted
:math:`P(y=` "cat":math:`)` equals :math:`1`. If we had no evidence to
suggest that :math:`y =` "cat" or that :math:`y =` "dog", then we might
say that the two possibilities were equally *likely* expressing this as
:math:`P(y=` "cat":math:`) = P(y=` "dog":math:`) = 0.5`. If we were
reasonably confident, but not sure that the image depicted a cat, we
might assign a probability :math:`0.5 < P(y=` "cat":math:`) < 1`.
Now consider the second case: given some weather monitoring data, we
want to predict the probability that it will rain in Taipei tomorrow. If
it is summertime, the rain might come with probability 0.5.
In both cases, we have some value of interest. And in both cases we are
uncertain about the outcome. But there is a key difference between the
two cases. In this first case, the image is in fact either a dog or a
cat, and we just do not know which. In the second case, the outcome may
actually be a random event, if you believe in such things (and most
physicists do). So probability is a flexible language for reasoning
about our level of certainty, and it can be applied effectively in a
broad set of contexts.
Basic Probability Theory
------------------------
Say that we cast a die and want to know what the chance is of seeing a 1
rather than another digit. If the die is fair, all the six outcomes
:math:`\{1, \ldots, 6\}` are equally likely to occur, and thus we would
see a :math:`1` in one out of six cases. Formally we state that
:math:`1` occurs with probability :math:`\frac{1}{6}`.
For a real die that we receive from a factory, we might not know those
proportions and we would need to check whether it is tainted. The only
way to investigate the die is by casting it many times and recording the
outcomes. For each cast of the die, we will observe a value in
:math:`\{1, \ldots, 6\}`. Given these outcomes, we want to investigate
the probability of observing each outcome.
One natural approach for each value is to take the individual count for
that value and to divide it by the total number of tosses. This gives us
an *estimate* of the probability of a given *event*. The *law of large
numbers* tell us that as the number of tosses grows this estimate will
draw closer and closer to the true underlying probability. Before going
into the details of what is going here, let us try it out.
To start, let us import the necessary packages.
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%matplotlib inline
import random
from mxnet import np, npx
from d2l import mxnet as d2l
npx.set_np()
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%matplotlib inline
import torch
from torch.distributions import multinomial
from d2l import torch as d2l
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%matplotlib inline
import numpy as np
import tensorflow as tf
import tensorflow_probability as tfp
from d2l import tensorflow as d2l
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Next, we will want to be able to cast the die. In statistics we call
this process of drawing examples from probability distributions
*sampling*. The distribution that assigns probabilities to a number of
discrete choices is called the *multinomial distribution*. We will give
a more formal definition of *distribution* later, but at a high level,
think of it as just an assignment of probabilities to events.
To draw a single sample, we simply pass in a vector of probabilities.
The output is another vector of the same length: its value at index
:math:`i` is the number of times the sampling outcome corresponds to
:math:`i`.
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fair_probs = [1.0 / 6] * 6
np.random.multinomial(1, fair_probs)
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array([0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0], dtype=int64)
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fair_probs = torch.ones([6]) / 6
multinomial.Multinomial(1, fair_probs).sample()
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tensor([0., 1., 0., 0., 0., 0.])
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fair_probs = tf.ones(6) / 6
tfp.distributions.Multinomial(1, fair_probs).sample()
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If you run the sampler a bunch of times, you will find that you get out
random values each time. As with estimating the fairness of a die, we
often want to generate many samples from the same distribution. It would
be unbearably slow to do this with a Python ``for`` loop, so the
function we are using supports drawing multiple samples at once,
returning an array of independent samples in any shape we might desire.
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np.random.multinomial(10, fair_probs)
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array([1, 1, 5, 1, 1, 1], dtype=int64)
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multinomial.Multinomial(10, fair_probs).sample()
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tensor([2., 2., 0., 2., 2., 2.])
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tfp.distributions.Multinomial(10, fair_probs).sample()
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Now that we know how to sample rolls of a die, we can simulate 1000
rolls. We can then go through and count, after each of the 1000 rolls,
how many times each number was rolled. Specifically, we calculate the
relative frequency as the estimate of the true probability.
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counts = np.random.multinomial(1000, fair_probs).astype(np.float32)
counts / 1000
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array([0.162, 0.149, 0.178, 0.17 , 0.166, 0.175])
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# Store the results as 32-bit floats for division
counts = multinomial.Multinomial(1000, fair_probs).sample()
counts / 1000 # Relative frequency as the estimate
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tensor([0.1610, 0.1680, 0.1570, 0.1540, 0.1850, 0.1750])
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counts = tfp.distributions.Multinomial(1000, fair_probs).sample()
counts / 1000
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Because we generated the data from a fair die, we know that each outcome
has true probability :math:`\frac{1}{6}`, roughly :math:`0.167`, so the
above output estimates look good.
We can also visualize how these probabilities converge over time towards
the true probability. Let us conduct 500 groups of experiments where
each group draws 10 samples.
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counts = np.random.multinomial(10, fair_probs, size=500)
cum_counts = counts.astype(np.float32).cumsum(axis=0)
estimates = cum_counts / cum_counts.sum(axis=1, keepdims=True)
d2l.set_figsize((6, 4.5))
for i in range(6):
d2l.plt.plot(estimates[:, i].asnumpy(),
label=("P(die=" + str(i + 1) + ")"))
d2l.plt.axhline(y=0.167, color='black', linestyle='dashed')
d2l.plt.gca().set_xlabel('Groups of experiments')
d2l.plt.gca().set_ylabel('Estimated probability')
d2l.plt.legend();
.. figure:: output_probability_245b7d_51_0.svg
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counts = multinomial.Multinomial(10, fair_probs).sample((500,))
cum_counts = counts.cumsum(dim=0)
estimates = cum_counts / cum_counts.sum(dim=1, keepdims=True)
d2l.set_figsize((6, 4.5))
for i in range(6):
d2l.plt.plot(estimates[:, i].numpy(),
label=("P(die=" + str(i + 1) + ")"))
d2l.plt.axhline(y=0.167, color='black', linestyle='dashed')
d2l.plt.gca().set_xlabel('Groups of experiments')
d2l.plt.gca().set_ylabel('Estimated probability')
d2l.plt.legend();
.. figure:: output_probability_245b7d_54_0.svg
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counts = tfp.distributions.Multinomial(10, fair_probs).sample(500)
cum_counts = tf.cumsum(counts, axis=0)
estimates = cum_counts / tf.reduce_sum(cum_counts, axis=1, keepdims=True)
d2l.set_figsize((6, 4.5))
for i in range(6):
d2l.plt.plot(estimates[:, i].numpy(),
label=("P(die=" + str(i + 1) + ")"))
d2l.plt.axhline(y=0.167, color='black', linestyle='dashed')
d2l.plt.gca().set_xlabel('Groups of experiments')
d2l.plt.gca().set_ylabel('Estimated probability')
d2l.plt.legend();
.. figure:: output_probability_245b7d_57_0.svg
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Each solid curve corresponds to one of the six values of the die and
gives our estimated probability that the die turns up that value as
assessed after each group of experiments. The dashed black line gives
the true underlying probability. As we get more data by conducting more
experiments, the :math:`6` solid curves converge towards the true
probability.
Axioms of Probability Theory
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When dealing with the rolls of a die, we call the set
:math:`\mathcal{S} = \{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6\}` the *sample space* or
*outcome space*, where each element is an *outcome*. An *event* is a set
of outcomes from a given sample space. For instance, "seeing a
:math:`5`" (:math:`\{5\}`) and "seeing an odd number"
(:math:`\{1, 3, 5\}`) are both valid events of rolling a die. Note that
if the outcome of a random experiment is in event :math:`\mathcal{A}`,
then event :math:`\mathcal{A}` has occurred. That is to say, if
:math:`3` dots faced up after rolling a die, since
:math:`3 \in \{1, 3, 5\}`, we can say that the event "seeing an odd
number" has occurred.
Formally, *probability* can be thought of as a function that maps a set
to a real value. The probability of an event :math:`\mathcal{A}` in the
given sample space :math:`\mathcal{S}`, denoted as
:math:`P(\mathcal{A})`, satisfies the following properties:
- For any event :math:`\mathcal{A}`, its probability is never negative,
i.e., :math:`P(\mathcal{A}) \geq 0`;
- Probability of the entire sample space is :math:`1`, i.e.,
:math:`P(\mathcal{S}) = 1`;
- For any countable sequence of events
:math:`\mathcal{A}_1, \mathcal{A}_2, \ldots` that are *mutually
exclusive* (:math:`\mathcal{A}_i \cap \mathcal{A}_j = \emptyset` for
all :math:`i \neq j`), the probability that any happens is equal to
the sum of their individual probabilities, i.e.,
:math:`P(\bigcup_{i=1}^{\infty} \mathcal{A}_i) = \sum_{i=1}^{\infty} P(\mathcal{A}_i)`.
These are also the axioms of probability theory, proposed by Kolmogorov
in 1933. Thanks to this axiom system, we can avoid any philosophical
dispute on randomness; instead, we can reason rigorously with a
mathematical language. For instance, by letting event
:math:`\mathcal{A}_1` be the entire sample space and
:math:`\mathcal{A}_i = \emptyset` for all :math:`i > 1`, we can prove
that :math:`P(\emptyset) = 0`, i.e., the probability of an impossible
event is :math:`0`.
Random Variables
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In our random experiment of casting a die, we introduced the notion of a
*random variable*. A random variable can be pretty much any quantity and
is not deterministic. It could take one value among a set of
possibilities in a random experiment. Consider a random variable
:math:`X` whose value is in the sample space
:math:`\mathcal{S} = \{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6\}` of rolling a die. We can
denote the event "seeing a :math:`5`" as :math:`\{X = 5\}` or
:math:`X = 5`, and its probability as :math:`P(\{X = 5\})` or
:math:`P(X = 5)`. By :math:`P(X = a)`, we make a distinction between the
random variable :math:`X` and the values (e.g., :math:`a`) that
:math:`X` can take. However, such pedantry results in a cumbersome
notation. For a compact notation, on one hand, we can just denote
:math:`P(X)` as the *distribution* over the random variable :math:`X`:
the distribution tells us the probability that :math:`X` takes any
value. On the other hand, we can simply write :math:`P(a)` to denote the
probability that a random variable takes the value :math:`a`. Since an
event in probability theory is a set of outcomes from the sample space,
we can specify a range of values for a random variable to take. For
example, :math:`P(1 \leq X \leq 3)` denotes the probability of the event
:math:`\{1 \leq X \leq 3\}`, which means
:math:`\{X = 1, 2, \text{or}, 3\}`. Equivalently,
:math:`P(1 \leq X \leq 3)` represents the probability that the random
variable :math:`X` can take a value from :math:`\{1, 2, 3\}`.
Note that there is a subtle difference between *discrete* random
variables, like the sides of a die, and *continuous* ones, like the
weight and the height of a person. There is little point in asking
whether two people have exactly the same height. If we take precise
enough measurements you will find that no two people on the planet have
the exact same height. In fact, if we take a fine enough measurement,
you will not have the same height when you wake up and when you go to
sleep. So there is no purpose in asking about the probability that
someone is 1.80139278291028719210196740527486202 meters tall. Given the
world population of humans the probability is virtually 0. It makes more
sense in this case to ask whether someone's height falls into a given
interval, say between 1.79 and 1.81 meters. In these cases we quantify
the likelihood that we see a value as a *density*. The height of exactly
1.80 meters has no probability, but nonzero density. In the interval
between any two different heights we have nonzero probability. In the
rest of this section, we consider probability in discrete space. For
probability over continuous random variables, you may refer to
:numref:`sec_random_variables`.
Dealing with Multiple Random Variables
--------------------------------------
Very often, we will want to consider more than one random variable at a
time. For instance, we may want to model the relationship between
diseases and symptoms. Given a disease and a symptom, say "flu" and
"cough", either may or may not occur in a patient with some probability.
While we hope that the probability of both would be close to zero, we
may want to estimate these probabilities and their relationships to each
other so that we may apply our inferences to effect better medical care.
As a more complicated example, images contain millions of pixels, thus
millions of random variables. And in many cases images will come with a
label, identifying objects in the image. We can also think of the label
as a random variable. We can even think of all the metadata as random
variables such as location, time, aperture, focal length, ISO, focus
distance, and camera type. All of these are random variables that occur
jointly. When we deal with multiple random variables, there are several
quantities of interest.
Joint Probability
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The first is called the *joint probability* :math:`P(A = a, B=b)`. Given
any values :math:`a` and :math:`b`, the joint probability lets us
answer, what is the probability that :math:`A=a` and :math:`B=b`
simultaneously? Note that for any values :math:`a` and :math:`b`,
:math:`P(A=a, B=b) \leq P(A=a)`. This has to be the case, since for
:math:`A=a` and :math:`B=b` to happen, :math:`A=a` has to happen *and*
:math:`B=b` also has to happen (and vice versa). Thus, :math:`A=a` and
:math:`B=b` cannot be more likely than :math:`A=a` or :math:`B=b`
individually.
Conditional Probability
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This brings us to an interesting ratio:
:math:`0 \leq \frac{P(A=a, B=b)}{P(A=a)} \leq 1`. We call this ratio a
*conditional probability* and denote it by :math:`P(B=b \mid A=a)`: it
is the probability of :math:`B=b`, provided that :math:`A=a` has
occurred.
Bayes' theorem
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Using the definition of conditional probabilities, we can derive one of
the most useful and celebrated equations in statistics: *Bayes'
theorem*. It goes as follows. By construction, we have the
*multiplication rule* that :math:`P(A, B) = P(B \mid A) P(A)`. By
symmetry, this also holds for :math:`P(A, B) = P(A \mid B) P(B)`. Assume
that :math:`P(B) > 0`. Solving for one of the conditional variables we
get
.. math:: P(A \mid B) = \frac{P(B \mid A) P(A)}{P(B)}.
Note that here we use the more compact notation where :math:`P(A, B)` is
a *joint distribution* and :math:`P(A \mid B)` is a *conditional
distribution*. Such distributions can be evaluated for particular values
:math:`A = a, B=b`.
Marginalization
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bayes' theorem is very useful if we want to infer one thing from the
other, say cause and effect, but we only know the properties in the
reverse direction, as we will see later in this section. One important
operation that we need, to make this work, is *marginalization*. It is
the operation of determining :math:`P(B)` from :math:`P(A, B)`. We can
see that the probability of :math:`B` amounts to accounting for all
possible choices of :math:`A` and aggregating the joint probabilities
over all of them:
.. math:: P(B) = \sum_{A} P(A, B),
which is also known as the *sum rule*. The probability or distribution
as a result of marginalization is called a *marginal probability* or a
*marginal distribution*.
Independence
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Another useful property to check for is *dependence* vs. *independence*.
Two random variables :math:`A` and :math:`B` being independent means
that the occurrence of one event of :math:`A` does not reveal any
information about the occurrence of an event of :math:`B`. In this case
:math:`P(B \mid A) = P(B)`. Statisticians typically express this as
:math:`A \perp B`. From Bayes' theorem, it follows immediately that also
:math:`P(A \mid B) = P(A)`. In all the other cases we call :math:`A` and
:math:`B` dependent. For instance, two successive rolls of a die are
independent. In contrast, the position of a light switch and the
brightness in the room are not (they are not perfectly deterministic,
though, since we could always have a broken light bulb, power failure,
or a broken switch).
Since :math:`P(A \mid B) = \frac{P(A, B)}{P(B)} = P(A)` is equivalent to
:math:`P(A, B) = P(A)P(B)`, two random variables are independent if and
only if their joint distribution is the product of their individual
distributions. Likewise, two random variables :math:`A` and :math:`B`
are *conditionally independent* given another random variable :math:`C`
if and only if :math:`P(A, B \mid C) = P(A \mid C)P(B \mid C)`. This is
expressed as :math:`A \perp B \mid C`.
.. _subsec_probability_hiv_app:
.. _conditional_prob_D1:
.. _conditional_prob_D2:
Application
~~~~~~~~~~~
Let us put our skills to the test. Assume that a doctor administers an
HIV test to a patient. This test is fairly accurate and it fails only
with 1% probability if the patient is healthy but reporting him as
diseased. Moreover, it never fails to detect HIV if the patient actually
has it. We use :math:`D_1` to indicate the diagnosis (:math:`1` if
positive and :math:`0` if negative) and :math:`H` to denote the HIV
status (:math:`1` if positive and :math:`0` if negative).
:numref:`conditional_prob_D1` lists such conditional probabilities.
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
| Conditional probability | :math:`H=1` | :math:`H=0` |
+=============================+===============+===============+
| :math:`P(D_1 = 1 \mid H)` | 1 | 0.01 |
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
| :math:`P(D_1 = 0 \mid H)` | 0 | 0.99 |
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
Table: Conditional probability of :math:`P(D_1 \mid H)`.
Note that the column sums are all 1 (but the row sums are not), since
the conditional probability needs to sum up to 1, just like the
probability. Let us work out the probability of the patient having HIV
if the test comes back positive, i.e., :math:`P(H = 1 \mid D_1 = 1)`.
Obviously this is going to depend on how common the disease is, since it
affects the number of false alarms. Assume that the population is quite
healthy, e.g., :math:`P(H=1) = 0.0015`. To apply Bayes' theorem, we need
to apply marginalization and the multiplication rule to determine
.. math::
\begin{aligned}
&P(D_1 = 1) \\
=& P(D_1=1, H=0) + P(D_1=1, H=1) \\
=& P(D_1=1 \mid H=0) P(H=0) + P(D_1=1 \mid H=1) P(H=1) \\
=& 0.011485.
\end{aligned}
Thus, we get
.. math::
\begin{aligned}
&P(H = 1 \mid D_1 = 1)\\ =& \frac{P(D_1=1 \mid H=1) P(H=1)}{P(D_1=1)} \\ =& 0.1306 \end{aligned}.
In other words, there is only a 13.06% chance that the patient actually
has HIV, despite using a very accurate test. As we can see, probability
can be counterintuitive.
What should a patient do upon receiving such terrifying news? Likely,
the patient would ask the physician to administer another test to get
clarity. The second test has different characteristics and it is not as
good as the first one, as shown in :numref:`conditional_prob_D2`.
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
| Conditional probability | :math:`H=1` | :math:`H=0` |
+=============================+===============+===============+
| :math:`P(D_2 = 1 \mid H)` | 0.98 | 0.03 |
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
| :math:`P(D_2 = 0 \mid H)` | 0.02 | 0.97 |
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
Table: Conditional probability of :math:`P(D_2 \mid H)`.
Unfortunately, the second test comes back positive, too. Let us work out
the requisite probabilities to invoke Bayes' theorem by assuming the
conditional independence:
.. math::
\begin{aligned}
&P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1 \mid H = 0) \\
=& P(D_1 = 1 \mid H = 0) P(D_2 = 1 \mid H = 0) \\
=& 0.0003,
\end{aligned}
.. math::
\begin{aligned}
&P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1 \mid H = 1) \\
=& P(D_1 = 1 \mid H = 1) P(D_2 = 1 \mid H = 1) \\
=& 0.98.
\end{aligned}
Now we can apply marginalization and the multiplication rule:
.. math::
\begin{aligned}
&P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1) \\
=& P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1, H = 0) + P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1, H = 1) \\
=& P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1 \mid H = 0)P(H=0) + P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1 \mid H = 1)P(H=1)\\
=& 0.00176955.
\end{aligned}
In the end, the probability of the patient having HIV given both
positive tests is
.. math::
\begin{aligned}
&P(H = 1 \mid D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1)\\
=& \frac{P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1 \mid H=1) P(H=1)}{P(D_1 = 1, D_2 = 1)} \\
=& 0.8307.
\end{aligned}
That is, the second test allowed us to gain much higher confidence that
not all is well. Despite the second test being considerably less
accurate than the first one, it still significantly improved our
estimate.
Expectation and Variance
------------------------
To summarize key characteristics of probability distributions, we need
some measures. The *expectation* (or average) of the random variable
:math:`X` is denoted as
.. math:: E[X] = \sum_{x} x P(X = x).
When the input of a function :math:`f(x)` is a random variable drawn
from the distribution :math:`P` with different values :math:`x`, the
expectation of :math:`f(x)` is computed as
.. math:: E_{x \sim P}[f(x)] = \sum_x f(x) P(x).
In many cases we want to measure by how much the random variable
:math:`X` deviates from its expectation. This can be quantified by the
variance
.. math::
\mathrm{Var}[X] = E\left[(X - E[X])^2\right] =
E[X^2] - E[X]^2.
Its square root is called the *standard deviation*. The variance of a
function of a random variable measures by how much the function deviates
from the expectation of the function, as different values :math:`x` of
the random variable are sampled from its distribution:
.. math:: \mathrm{Var}[f(x)] = E\left[\left(f(x) - E[f(x)]\right)^2\right].
Summary
-------
- We can sample from probability distributions.
- We can analyze multiple random variables using joint distribution,
conditional distribution, Bayes' theorem, marginalization, and
independence assumptions.
- Expectation and variance offer useful measures to summarize key
characteristics of probability distributions.
Exercises
---------
1. We conducted :math:`m=500` groups of experiments where each group
draws :math:`n=10` samples. Vary :math:`m` and :math:`n`. Observe and
analyze the experimental results.
2. Given two events with probability :math:`P(\mathcal{A})` and
:math:`P(\mathcal{B})`, compute upper and lower bounds on
:math:`P(\mathcal{A} \cup \mathcal{B})` and
:math:`P(\mathcal{A} \cap \mathcal{B})`. (Hint: display the situation
using a `Venn
Diagram `__.)
3. Assume that we have a sequence of random variables, say :math:`A`,
:math:`B`, and :math:`C`, where :math:`B` only depends on :math:`A`,
and :math:`C` only depends on :math:`B`, can you simplify the joint
probability :math:`P(A, B, C)`? (Hint: this is a `Markov
Chain `__.)
4. In :numref:`subsec_probability_hiv_app`, the first test is more
accurate. Why not run the first test twice rather than run both the
first and second tests?
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