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

Poisson Distribution

This document discusses the Poisson distribution, which models the probability of a number of discrete events occurring in a fixed interval of time or space if these events occur with a known average rate and independently of the time since the last event. The key properties are that the probability of an event is proportional to the interval of time or space and the average number of occurrences is equal to the variance.

Uploaded by

yanghaoyi1985
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views

Poisson Distribution

This document discusses the Poisson distribution, which models the probability of a number of discrete events occurring in a fixed interval of time or space if these events occur with a known average rate and independently of the time since the last event. The key properties are that the probability of an event is proportional to the interval of time or space and the average number of occurrences is equal to the variance.

Uploaded by

yanghaoyi1985
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Poisson Distribution

A Poisson distribution is the probability distribution that results from a Poisson experiment.

Attributes of a Poisson Experiment

A Poisson experiment is a statistical experiment that has the following properties:

 The experiment results in outcomes that can be classified as successes or failures.


 The average number of successes (μ) that occurs in a specified region is known.
 The probability that a success will occur is proportional to the size of the region.
 The probability that a success will occur in an extremely small region is virtually zero.

Note that the specified region could take many forms. For instance, it could be a length, an
area, a volume, a period of time, etc.

Notation

The following notation is helpful, when we talk about the Poisson distribution.

 e: A constant equal to approximately 2.71828. (Actually, e is the base of the natural


logarithm system.)
 μ: The mean number of successes that occur in a specified region.
 x: The actual number of successes that occur in a specified region.
 P(x; μ): The Poisson probability that exactly x successes occur in a Poisson
experiment, when the mean number of successes is μ.

Poisson Distribution

A Poisson random variable is the number of successes that result from a Poisson experiment.
The probability distribution of a Poisson random variable is called a Poisson distribution.

Given the mean number of successes (μ) that occur in a specified region, we can compute the
Poisson probability based on the following formula:
Poisson Formula. Suppose we conduct a Poisson experiment, in which the average number of
successes within a given region is μ. Then, the Poisson probability is:

P(x; μ) = (e-μ) (μx) / x!

where x is the actual number of successes that result from the experiment, and e is
approximately equal to 2.71828.

The Poisson distribution has the following properties:

 The mean of the distribution is equal to μ .


 The variance is also equal to μ .

Example 1

The average number of homes sold by the Acme Realty company is 2 homes per day. What is
the probability that exactly 3 homes will be sold tomorrow?

Solution: This is a Poisson experiment in which we know the following:

 μ = 2; since 2 homes are sold per day, on average.


 x = 3; since we want to find the likelihood that 3 homes will be sold tomorrow.
 e = 2.71828; since e is a constant equal to approximately 2.71828.

We plug these values into the Poisson formula as follows:

P(x; μ) = (e-μ) (μx) / x!


P(3; 2) = (2.71828-2) (23) / 3!
P(3; 2) = (0.13534) (8) / 6
P(3; 2) = 0.180

Thus, the probability of selling 3 homes tomorrow is 0.180 .

Cumulative Poisson Probability

A cumulative Poisson probability refers to the probability that the Poisson random variable is
greater than some specified lower limit and less than some specified upper limit.
Example 1

Suppose the average number of lions seen on a 1-day safari is 5. What is the probability that
tourists will see fewer than four lions on the next 1-day safari?

Solution: This is a Poisson experiment in which we know the following:

 μ = 5; since 5 lions are seen per safari, on average.


 x = 0, 1, 2, or 3; since we want to find the likelihood that tourists will see fewer than 4
lions; that is, we want the probability that they will see 0, 1, 2, or 3 lions.
 e = 2.71828; since e is a constant equal to approximately 2.71828.

To solve this problem, we need to find the probability that tourists will see 0, 1, 2, or 3 lions.
Thus, we need to calculate the sum of four probabilities: P(0; 5) + P(1; 5) + P(2; 5) + P(3; 5).
To compute this sum, we use the Poisson formula:

P(x < 3, 5) = P(0; 5) + P(1; 5) + P(2; 5) + P(3; 5)


P(x < 3, 5) = [ (e-5)(50) / 0! ] + [ (e-5)(51) / 1! ] + [ (e-5)(52) / 2! ] + [ (e-5)(53) / 3! ]
P(x < 3, 5) = [ (0.006738)(1) / 1 ] + [ (0.006738)(5) / 1 ] + [ (0.006738)(25) / 2 ] + [ (0.006738)
(125) / 6 ]
P(x < 3, 5) = [ 0.0067 ] + [ 0.03369 ] + [ 0.084224 ] + [ 0.140375 ]
P(x < 3, 5) = 0.2650

Thus, the probability of seeing at no more than 3 lions is 0.2650.

You might also like