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PEOPLE’S INTUITIONS ABOUT RANDOMNESS AND PROBABILITY: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY

18

Citations

27

References

2006

Year

Abstract


 
 
 What people mean by randomness should be taken into account when teaching statistical inference. This experiment explored subjective beliefs about randomness and probability through two successive tasks. Subjects were asked to categorize 16 familiar items: 8 real items from everyday life experiences, and 8 stochastic items involving a repeatable process. Three groups of subjects differing according to their background knowledge of probability theory were compared. An important finding is that the arguments used to judge if an event is random and those to judge if it is not random appear to be of different natures. While the concept of probability has been introduced to formalize randomness, a majority of individuals appeared to consider probability as a primary concept
 First published May 2006 at Statistics Education Research Journal: Archives
 
 

References

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