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Till Week 2 Notes

This document provides an overview of probability and random processes by introducing fundamental concepts in set theory and functions. It defines sets, mappings, functions, equivalence relations, countable and uncountable sets. It also introduces basic concepts in probability including sample spaces, events, properties of events, and discrete sample spaces. Key concepts covered include mappings, bijective functions, countable and uncountable sets, and basic probability terms like sample spaces and events.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views

Till Week 2 Notes

This document provides an overview of probability and random processes by introducing fundamental concepts in set theory and functions. It defines sets, mappings, functions, equivalence relations, countable and uncountable sets. It also introduces basic concepts in probability including sample spaces, events, properties of events, and discrete sample spaces. Key concepts covered include mappings, bijective functions, countable and uncountable sets, and basic probability terms like sample spaces and events.

Uploaded by

diti sanghai
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EE325 - Probability and Random Processes

1 Set Theory 1.2 Functions

1.1 Introduction • Mapping: A mapping or a map f of A into B is a re-


lation such that ∀a ∈ A, ∃ a unique b s.t. (a,b) ∈ f.
• Def-Set: A collection of well defined objects. We then write f : A → B and b = f(a)
Examples: A = set of people, B = set of players in a Example: f : N → N ; f(n) = n2
match, C = {1, 2, 3, 4}, D = {x ∈ R|1 ≤ x ≤ 2}
• Def-Function:A function f: A → B is a rule that maps
• Russell’s Paradox: Let S is a set of sets which do not every element of A to exactly one element in B.
contain themselves as elements. This is not well de-
fined. If S in in the set, it shouldn’t be in it, and if it • ∀x ∈ A, ∃ unique y ∈ B such that, y=f(x).
is, it should be. Hence a contradiction.
Example, set of all men that shave themselves, so does • y is the image of x, and x is the pre-image of y.
a single barber belong to S?? A is the domain and B is the co-domain.
Range R is the subset of co-domain such that,
• To prove A ⊆ B : Take a ∈ A → x ∈ B {y ∈ B : ∃x ∈ A for which y=f(x)}
To prove A=B: A⊆ , B ⊆ A.
1.2.1 Types of Functions
• De-Morgan’s Laws:

A∪B =A∩B • One-to-one or Injective: f : A → B is said to be in-


jective if every element in the range R has a unique
A∩B =A∪B pre-image. Example f (x) = ex

• A-B = {x—x ∈ A and x ∈


/ B} • Onto or Surjective: f : A → B is surjective if R=B.
Every element in B has a pre-image in A. Example,
A4B = (A − B) ∪ (B − A) f : R → [0, 1], f (x) = sin(x) is onto but not one-to-one
= (A ∪ B) − (A ∩ B)
• Bijective: f : a → B is bijective if it is both injective
and surjective. Example, f : R → R, f (x) = x3 .
• AB = set of maps of B into A (B→ A)
A2 ≡ A{1,2} because
X n is the set of all possible n-tuples (ordered). 1.3 Cardinatility and Countability
Each ordered n-tuple is a map between the in-
dex of the elements in the n-tuple and the el- • Cardinality: No .of elements in the set.
ements in that n-tuple.
• Cantor introduced the concept of comparing cardinal-
• Power set: The power set of A contains all the subsets ity of infinite sets based on what kind of functions are
of A. possible to construct between the two sets.
Elements in a power set is 2|A|
• Two sets A and B are said to be equicardinal if there
• Relation: A relation of A into B is a subset of carte- exists a bijective function from A to B.
sian product AXB. Written as aRb like ‘a≤b’. |B| ≥ |A| if ∃ a one-to-one function from A to B.
|B| > |A| if ∃ a one-to-one function from A to B, but
• Def- Equivalence Relation: A relation R of A into A NOT a bijective function.
is an equivalence relation if:
1.3.1 Countable Sets
– Reflexive: (a,a) ∈ R, ∀a ∈ A
– Symmetric: ∀ (a, b) ∈ A, if (a,b) ∈ R then (b,a) • A set A is said to be countably infinite if it is equicar-
∈R dinal with the set of natural numbers N.
– Transitive: ∀ a,b,c ∈ A, if (a,b),(b,c) ∈ R, then • Example 1: consider the set of all integers, Z. To show
(a,c) ∈ R that it is countably infinite, we need to construct a bi-
jective function from N.
Examples, ”similar” is equivalence, ”less than” in not
Such a bijective function could be
equivalence as it does not satisfy the reflexive and
symmetric property. (
n/2 , n → even
f (n) =
• Equivalence Class: Any equivalence relation parti- −(n − 1)/2 , n → odd
tions the set into a disjoint union of subsets, which
are known as equivalence classes, such that two ele- Another trait of countably infinite set is that its ele-
ments are related iff they are in the same equivalence ments can be put in a numbered list, or can be pro-
class. duced using a for, or a nested for loop.
Example ”Mod 5” gives 5 equivalence classes.
Given any partition of A, i.e. Pi ⊆ A; i ∈ I, s.t. ∪ Pi = • Example 2: Prove that set of even natural numbers is
A, one can define an equivalence relation R: (a,b) ∈ countably infinite.
R iff a,b ∈ Pi for some i. Proof: The bijective function can be f (x) = 2x
• Example 3: Set of rational numbers (0,1] • If the sample space is finite or countably infitite, it is
Proof: Create a infinite 2D grid. where rows indicate called a discrete sample spaces
values of a and columns value of b. (a,b) indicates
• Events: Subsets of the sample space where probability
rational a/b. Since all elements are less than 1, a¡b.
is assigned in a consistent way.
Traverse different points on the grid, and hence it is
equicardinal to natural numbers. • In any experiment, if A,B ⊆ S are events, then A ∪ B
and A ∩ B should also be events.
• All countably infinite sets are equicardinal!
• Hence, for mathematical consistency, we expect that
• A set is said to be countable id it is finite or countably countable union and intersections of events should also
infinite. be events, i.e.

S
• Theorem: Union of countable sets is an event if A1 , A2 .. are events, and
i=1
Let I be a countable index set. S
I={1,2,3,...}. Let i be ∞
T
countable sets for i ∈ I. Then i is also countable. is an event if A1 , A2 .. are events
i∈I i=1
Proved in Tut1.
• If A is an event, then Ac should also be an event.
• Using this theorem, we can clearly prove that the set • The whole sample space S and empty set ∅ must be
of all rational is also countably infinite. events.
1.3.2 Uncountable Sets • For discrete sample spaces, we usually take P(S), the
• Def- A set is uncountable if its cardinality is strictly power set of S, to be the set of events.
greater than N. Example, [0,1], R. • If A ∩ B = ∅, then A and B are disjoint events.
• Lemma: The set of all infinite length binary strings • Properties of events/subsets: Commutativity, associa-
{0, 1}∞ is uncountable. tivity and distributivity
Proof: Cantor’s diagonalization argument
Assume {0, 1}∞ is countable, then it should be pos- • De Morgan’s Laws:
sible to enumerate as a numbered list. Let the ∞ ∞
Ai ) c = Aci
T S
first element be (a11 , a12 , a13 ...), and ith element be (
i=1 i=1
(ai1 , ai2 , ...). ∞ ∞
Ai )c = Aci
S T
Consider the following string, (a11 , a22 ...). Let this ex- (
i=1 i=1
ist in the list at position t. But according to the string
considered, att should be equal to att .This is clearly
a contradiction. Hence, {0, 1}∞ is NOT a countable 2.2 Probability Measure
set.
• Def- Probability measure: A probability measure P
• Lemma: [0,1], R, R/Q are uncountable. on (Ω, F ) is a function P: F→ [0, 1] , where F⊆P(Ω)
Proof 1:[0,1] → Prove that ∃ bijection from is the event space and Ω the sample space, satisfying:
{0, 1}∞ → [0, 1]. Associate any no. in [0,1] with
P∞ 1. P(∅)=0, P(Ω)=1
its binary expansion g(a)= k=1 2−k .ak . It is possi-
ble that 2 binary expansions may point to the same 2. If A1 , A2 , ... is a collection of disjoint events, i.e.
no. for Dyadic Rationals,i.e. of the form 2ab . Example Ai ∩ Aj = ∅ ∀ i 6= j, i.e. countably additive, then
{1,0,0,0,...} and {0,1,1,1,...} both point to half?????. ∞
[ ∞
X
P( Ai ) = P (Ai )
Proof 2: Define f:[0,1] → R like f (x) = tan(πx−π/2) i=1 i=1

• The triplet (Ω,F,P) is called a Probability Space


Proof 3: R = Q ∪ R/Q and since Q is countable,
the set of irrationals will be uncountable. • Lemma 1:
• Cantor’s Theorem: For any set A, the power set 1. P(Ac ) = 1 - P(A)[P ]
of A has a strictly greater cardinality than A itself. 2. If A ⊆ B. then P(A) ≤ P(B)[P ]
(Proved in the tutorial)
3. P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B)- P(A ∩ B)[P ]
n n
(−1)j−1 Ai )[P ]
S P P T
4. P( Ai ) = P(
2 Probability Theory i=1 j=1 S⊆[1:n],|S|=j i∈S

• Lemma 2:
2.1 Sample space and events [P ]
1. Let A1 ⊆ A2 ⊆ A3 .... be a increasing sequence
• Sample Space (S or Ω): The set all possible outcomes of events and
of a random experiment. ∞
Example, for a coin toss, S = {H,T}. For a rolling
[
A = lim Ai = Ai
die, it is S={1,2,3,4,5,6} i→∞
i=1

• The sample space can be finite, countably infinite or then,


uncountably infinite. P (A) = lim P (Ai )
i→∞
[P ]
2. Let B1 ⊇ B2 ⊇ B3 ... be a decreasing sequence
of events, and

\
B = lim Bi = Bi
i→∞
i=1

then,
P (B) = lim P (Bi )
i→∞

• Many experiments give equiprobable outcomes, much


of the probabilistic calculations are combinatorial in
such problems.

• For a discrete sample space Ω with F=P(Ω), a prob-


ability measure is simply P
defined by a function
P : Ω → [0, 1], such that P(x)=1
• For such a space, any event is a countable union of
singleton events.

S n
P
• Union bound : P ( Ei ) ≤ P (Ei )
i=1 i=1


S n
P P
• P( Ei ) ≥ P (Ei ) − P (Ei Ej )
i=1 i=1 {i,j}⊆[1:n]
adding subtracting more terms leads to changing size
of LHS and RHS, so we get a series of bounds.

2.3 Conditional Probability


• P(A|B) means given B occurred, how likely is A to
occur = P(A ∩ B)/P (B), P(B)>0.

• For any given event B s.t. P(B)>0, PB (.)=P(.|B) is


a valid probability measure.[P ]
• Properties:
1. Multiplication Rule: P(A ∩ B)=P(B).(A|B) =
P(A).P(B|A)
In general,
n
T n
Q
P( Ai ) = P (A1 ). P (Ai |A1 ∩ A2 ∩ ...Ai−1 )
i=1 i=2
This applies for any countable set.
2. Law
P of total probability: Let A be any event,
Bi is countable collection of events that par-
tition Ω, P(Bi ) > 0). Then,
X
P (A) = P (Bi ) = P (A|Bi )
i∈I

i.e. weighted average of conditional probabili-


ties.[P ]
3. Bayes Rule: Similar setting as that of LoTP.

P (Bi |A) = P (A ∩ Bi )/P (A)


= P (Bi ).P (A|Bi )/ΣP (Bi ).P (A|Bi )
Appendix: Proofs and Calculations
 T 
1. Proof: P(Ac ) = 1 - P(A)
S S
PB Ai = P Ai B /P(B)
i∈I i∈I
A ∪ Ac = Ω, A ∩ Ac = ∅
S P
=P {Ai ∩ B}/P(B) = P (Ai ∩ B)/P (B)
So, P(A ∪ Ac )=P(A)+P(Ac )=1 P i∈I P i∈I
P(Ac )=1-P(A) = P (Ai |B) = PB (Ai )
i∈B i∈B
2. Proof: If A ⊆ B. then P(A) ≤ P(B) Hence, all the axioms are satisfied. And it indeed is a
valid probability measure.
P(B) = P(A) + P(B/A)≥ P(A)
8. Proof: Law of Total probaility
3. Proof: P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A ∩ B)
T A ∩ Bi ’s P
Let Bi ’s partition Ω, then partition A and
P (A ∪ B) = P (A) + P (B/A) are disjoint. i.e., A= A ∩ Bi = P (A ∩ Bi ) =
i∈I i∈I
= P (A) + P (B) − P (B ∩ A) P
P (Bi ).P (A|Bi )
i∈I
n n
j−1
S P P T
4. Proof: P( Ai ) = (−1) P( Ai )
i=1 j=1 S⊆[1:n],|S|=j i∈S

For any x∈ Ω, suppose x is in t set among


A1 , A2 , ...An . Then the multiplicity of P(x) in RHS
is:
=t C1 −t C2 +t C3 ....(−1)(t−1)t Ct
=t C1 −t C2 +t C3 ....(−1)(t−1)t Ct − 1 + 1
= 1 - (1 - t C1 −t C2 +t C3 ....(−1)(t−1)t Ct )
=1-(1-1)t = 1
n
S
So, for each x ∈ Ai , P(x) has been added exactly
i=1
n
S
once on the RHS. Hence RHS= P( Ai )=LHS
i=1

5. Proof: Let A1 ⊆ A2 ⊆ A3 .... be a increasing se-


quence of events and

[
A = lim Ai = Ai
i→∞
i=1

then,
P (A) = lim P (Ai )
i→∞

A = A1 ∪(A2 /A1 )∪(A3 /A2 )... is a union of the disjoint



P
events. Hence, P(A)= P(A1 ) + P (Ai+1 /Ai )
i=1


X
 
= lim P (A1 ) + [P (Ai+1 − P (Ai )] = lim P (An )
n→∞ n→∞
i=1

6. Proof: Let B1 ⊇ B2 ⊇ B3 ... be a decreasing se-


quence of events, and

\
B = lim Bi = Bi
i→∞
i=1

then,
P (B) = lim P (Bi )
i→∞

follows by taking complement and using the previous


lemma.
7. Proof: For any given event B s.t. P(B)>0,
PB (.)=P(.|B) is a valid probability measure.
PB (∅) = 0, PB (Ω) = 1
Suppose {Ai , i ∈ I} is a countable collection of dis-
joint events.

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