I don't believe that description correctly represents the analysis. — andrewk
No. The point is that it is not a possibility that the exhaustive disjunctive possibilities of what's contained in the other envelope are 5 and 20. This is because it's known already that for some X, the amount in the other envelope is X or 2X. But 5 and 20 are not X and 2X for any value of X. Thus it cannot be that the exhaustive disjunctive possibilities are these... — Snakes Alive
once the player has seen the amount Y in the first envelope, they have narrowed the possibilities for X down to two possible values: Y or Y/2. So if that interpretation is correct I would say the code does not reflect the player's expectations. — andrewk
It's a meaningless question. 'on average' is not a meaningful statistical concept. We can only meaningfully talk in terms of expected values. The expected values depend on the distributions of the random variables, and those distributions will depend on the information available to the person that is forming the expectation. — andrewk
A statistic is any quantity that can be calculated from the observed data.
. . . the word mean when referring to an average calculated over an entire population. A mean is therefore a parameter. When referring to the average in a sample--which is both a statistics and estimate of the population mean--. . .
.The expected value of a random variable is just the mean of the random variable. — Statistics How To
You open A and it has 10 bucks, but you don't know if that is 10=X or 10=2X so A is still defined as [X,2X]. If A is X then B is 2X and if A is 2X then B has to be X. So B is still defined as [X,2X]. That part remains the same. — Jeremiah
R and S are mutually exclusive events. — Jeremiah
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