Each person has a 1/3 probability of making the choice from 3.
The probability of both/all events occurring is determined by multiplying the probabilities of the individual events.
Im not good at probability.
If there are 3 choices, and 3 people can choose any of them, what are the odds of the 3 people choosing all different choices?
5 answers
so is it 1/27?
There are 3! = 6 ways to assign the possible choices that are all different to the persons. The total number of choices, irrespective if they are all different or not, is 3^3 = 27.
The persons are randomly sampling from the set of 27 total choices, the probability that such a choice belongs to the subset of 6 that are all different is thus 6/27 = 2/9.
The persons are randomly sampling from the set of 27 total choices, the probability that such a choice belongs to the subset of 6 that are all different is thus 6/27 = 2/9.
what if this is a game, and we play like 4 rounds? Would it be 2/9 ^4?
Each game is independent so yes.