No. The more trials the better. You can only estimate the probability of an outcome based on the data from experimentation. But if you find that the percentage in 90 trials is practically identical to the percentage in 30 trials, that is an indication that the percentage will hold true for even larger numbers of trials.
The probability that is based on repeated trials of an experiment is called empirical or experimental probability. It is calculated by dividing the number of favorable outcomes by the total number of trials conducted. As more trials are performed, the empirical probability tends to converge to the theoretical probability.
It is empirical (or experimental) probability.
It is the probability of an event calculated from repeated trials of an experiment.
The number of trials is important to a science experiment. The more times you do the experiment, the more meaningful your data will be.
Number of trials is how many times you test your hypothesis. When you are doing trials the end result may come out differently every time.
Repeated Trials: The number of trials preformed during a scientific experiment, with the purpose of receiving a more accurate result (minimizing the effects of errors or outliers).
Trials are the amount of times a certain experiment is repeated.
absolute frequency is a term decribing the total number of trials you did. a relative frequency is the number of measurements in an interval of a frequency distribution. or the ratio of the number of times an event occurs in a series of trials of a chance experiment to the number of trials of the experiment performed. so the difference is one is the total trials, and the other...well it depends on which definition you picked...
absolute frequency is a term decribing the total number of trials you did. a relative frequency is the number of measurements in an interval of a frequency distribution. or the ratio of the number of times an event occurs in a series of trials of a chance experiment to the number of trials of the experiment performed. so the difference is one is the total trials, and the other...well it depends on which definition you picked...
becase it reduces the percent error and it gives a much better idea of what is the best result
Repeated trials of said experiment.
so your answer is accurate
yes because a quarter has 2 sides but flipping it you dont have a 100%chance if it lands on the same side
It's when you repeat an experiment over and over again to see whether you'll get the same results all the time, some of the time, or never. Being able to predict what's going to happen is usually seen as proof of that your theory about how things work is correct.
So the experiment's results are more reliable
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