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  2. Coin flipping - Wikipedia

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coin_flipping

    Coin flipping, coin tossing, or heads or tails is the practice of throwing a coin in the air and checking which side is showing when it lands, in order to randomly choose between two alternatives. It is a form of sortition which inherently has two possible outcomes.

  3. Quantum coin flipping - Wikipedia

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_coin_flipping

    Quantum coin flipping is when random qubits are generated between two players that do not trust each other because both of them want to win the coin toss, which could lead them to cheat in a variety of ways. [3]

  4. Gambler's ruin - Wikipedia

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gambler's_ruin

    The earliest known mention of the gambler's ruin problem is a letter from Blaise Pascal to Pierre Fermat in 1656 (two years after the more famous correspondence on the problem of points). [2] Pascal's version was summarized in a 1656 letter from Pierre de Carcavi to Huygens: . Let two men play with three dice, the first player scoring a point whenever 11 is thrown, and the second whenever 14 ...

  5. Coin flips don't truly have a 50/50 chance of being heads or...

    www.newscientist.com/article/2397248-coin-flips-dont-truly...

    If you flip a coin, the odds of getting heads or tails are an equal 50 per cent chance – right? While this is what statistics textbooks will tell you, there is increasing evidence that it isn...

  6. Coin flipping, coin tossing, or heads or tails is the practice of throwing a coin in the air and checking which side is showing when it lands, in order to randomly choose between two alternatives. It is a form of sortition which inherently has two possible outcomes.

  7. Coin flipping - wikidoc

    www.wikidoc.org/index.php/Coin_flipping

    Coin flipping or coin tossing is the practice of throwing a coin in the air to resolve a dispute between two parties or otherwise choose between two alternatives.

  8. Scientists Destroy Illusion That Coin Toss Flips Are 50–50

    www.scientificamerican.com/article/scientists-destroy...

    The flipped coins, according to findings in a preprint study posted on arXiv.org, landed with the same side facing upward as before the toss 50.8 percent of the time. The large number of throws...

  9. The St. Petersburg Paradox - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/paradox-stpetersburg

    The standard version of the St. Petersburg paradox is derived from the St. Petersburg game, which is played as follows: A fair coin is flipped until it comes up heads the first time. At that point the player wins \ (\$2^n,\) where n is the number of times the coin was flipped.

  10. Category : Coin flipping - Wikimedia

    commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Coin_flipping

    From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. coin flipping. practice of throwing a coin in the air to choose between two alternatives. Upload media. Wikipedia. Instance of. game of chance. Subclass of. flip.

  11. Flipism - Wikipedia

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flipism

    Flipism is a normative decision theory in a sense that it prescribes how decisions should be made. In the comic, flipism shows remarkable ability to make right conclusions without any information—but only once in a while. In reality, flipping a coin would only lead to random decisions.