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The birthday paradox, hard to believe
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hooknife
The birthday paradox states that if there are 23 people in a room then there is a slightly more than 50:50 chance that at least two of them will have the same birthday. This means that a higher probability applies to a typical school class size of thirty, where the 'paradox' is often cited. For 60 or more people, the probability is greater than 99%. This is not a paradox in the sense of leading to a logical contradiction; it is a paradox in the sense that it is a mathematical truth that contradicts common intuition. Most people estimate that the chance is much lower than 50:50. Calculating this probability (and related ones) is the birthday problem. The mathematics behind it has been used to devise a well-known cryptographical attack named the birthday attack.

Taken from - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_paradox
Fundamental
I made some money off of this once. I made a bet for £20 with a friend that I could find 2 people at this house party with the same birthday. There was about 40 people there so I knew I had the odds in my favour. :D

I found 2 sets of 2, didn't get paid twice though... :p
hooknife
quote:
Originally posted by Fundamental
I made some money off of this once. I made a bet for £20 with a friend that I could find 2 people at this house party with the same birthday. There was about 40 people there so I knew I had the odds in my favour. :D

I found 2 sets of 2, didn't get paid twice though... :p



hmmmmmm......thats a damn good idea, I'll have to try that one.
jonze234
statistics professors love to do that in their classes.
M@t
bumpety click

for research's sake
Inertia
i do find that hard to believe. in a school of 400+, i'm the only one with my birthday.

the only other people i know of with my same bday (feb 12) are abe lincoln, this dude i recently met, and the mother of one of my friends.
hooknife
quote:
Originally posted by Inertia
i do find that hard to believe. in a school of 400+, i'm the only one with my birthday.


That is not the normal, obviously.
Resnick
quote:
Originally posted by hooknife
That is not the normal, obviously.


actually it is...theres a difference between someone having ur birthday and any 2 ppl having the same birthday

statistically tehre should be 1 other person in ur school that has ur bday (in 400 ppl)
milanster
yup...took that in my probability class in univ 3 yrs ago....damn interesting ;)
kutvolkots
Less people rememeber their condoms in spring it's that simple.

Floorfiller
that's pretty crazy...i never would think that would be true....
butterfly
arent some birthdays more common than others? if that is the case, is it considered in calculating the statiscal probability?
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