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* ID :  [https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q825367 Q825367]

2020년 12월 26일 (토) 05:13 판

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  1. During a coin toss, the coin is thrown into the air such that it rotates edge-over-edge several times.[1]
  2. To choose one out of three, either reverse this (the odd coin out is the winner), or add a regular two-way coin flip between the remaining players as a second step.[1]
  3. Coin tossing is a simple and unbiased way of settling a dispute or deciding between two or more arbitrary options.[1]
  4. In an association football match, the team winning the coin toss chooses which goal to attack in the first half; the opposing team kicks off for the first half.[1]
  5. Back in 2016, Hilary Clinton won the Iowa Caucus off the back of a coin toss.[2]
  6. Game is a great method of getting 7 to 1 odds on a coin toss.[2]
  7. Each person guesses what they think the outcome of a coin toss will be.[2]
  8. If you practice your coin toss using the same coin over and over, eventually you can get your odds of winning up by pure force of will alone.[2]
  9. Click “flip it” and you get an animation of a coin spinning until it resolves heads or tails.[3]
  10. If you model the starting position of the coin and the force of the flip, you can predict the result better than random chance.[3]
  11. A famous paper found that there is a 51% chance that a coin flip results in the same side as the side that was facing up originally.[3]
  12. Use Google’s coin flipper or actually flip a coin and see what results you get.[3]
  13. Let’s create a coin flipping program to simulate a real coin toss.[4]
  14. You can animate the coin toss to add the feeling of suspense.[4]
  15. Coin Toss: Simulation of a coin toss allowing the user to input the number of flips.[5]
  16. The coin toss is not about probability at all, he says.[6]
  17. The premise is simple: for every crossroad in life requiring a decision, choose a face of a coin (heads or tails), toss the coin, and then make a decision based on the outcome of the coin flip.[7]
  18. A coin flip for each decision resulted in a series of mishaps for poor Donald.[7]
  19. Interestingly, many of these problems fit within the coin flip framework.[7]
  20. You can even use your phone to toss a coin with the same gesture tossing a real coin![8]
  21. On the one hand, simple experiments like dice rolling, coin flipping, and spinning spinners are very much overdone in elementary curricula around the world.[9]
  22. Have students make a fake simulation of a 100 coin flip experiment.[9]
  23. Try your own coin flip simulation here: Virtual Coin Flip Simulation.[9]
  24. You can settle almost anything with a coin flip, no matter how big, or how small.[10]
  25. The act of flipping a coin to determine one of two possible outcomes has actually been around for centuries.[10]
  26. Today, the coin toss is widely used as a form of making a decision between two equally possible answers.[10]
  27. The coin toss has become a part of everyday life, with many using it to simply decide between trivial differences.[10]
  28. I'm going to take a fair coin, and I'm going to flip it three times.[11]
  29. -- there are 8 equally likely possibilities if I'm flipping a coin 3 times.[11]
  30. Flipping a coin may not be the fairest way to settle disputes.[12]
  31. About a decade ago, statistician Persi Diaconis started to wonder if the outcome of a coin flip really is just a matter of chance.[12]
  32. The randomness in a coin toss, it appears, is introduced by sloppy humans.[12]
  33. In football's inaugural kickoff coin toss, the coin is not caught but allowed to bounce on the ground.[12]
  34. Sometimes it is hard to get a coin for doing the coin flip.[13]
  35. Now Using FlipSimu Coin Flip Simulator![13]
  36. This behavior is described by a model in which a “coin toss” decides whether a segment of fiber hosts an imperfection or not.[14]
  37. My friend wants to replicate the coin flipping scam.[15]
  38. The first step is to mathematise the act of flipping a coin: the easiest way to do this is to assign a score of 0 for a tail and 1 for a head.[16]
  39. Experiencing sudden feelings regarding the outcome of a coin flip is not an unfamiliar phenomenon.[17]
  40. In this classic situation, the outcome of the coin flip determines the decision, and individuals cannot decide on their own.[17]
  41. Flipping a coin to help make a decision When individuals flip a coin, they do not necessarily need to follow the outcome.[17]
  42. He disliked the outcome of the coin flip and felt that he actually did not want to take that job.[17]
  43. From 2016, under an England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) trial, visiting county teams will be given the option of bowling first, and a coin toss will only take place if they decline.[18]
  44. People all over the world resolve arguments and make decisions using the time-honored tradition of flipping a coin, but did you ever wonder how the practice started?[19]
  45. Wherever it started, the coin flip has become a part of everyday life in all corners of the globe.[19]
  46. American and Australian football games are started with a coin toss to decide which team gets the ball first.[19]
  47. So while the origins of flipping a coin remain shrouded in mystery, it’s a practice that’s employed all over the world.[19]
  48. To find out whether the outcome of a coin flip can be influenced by the person flipping the coin.[20]
  49. The purpose of this experiment is to determine first the probability of a coin landing heads or tails and second whether the person flipping a coin can influence the coin to land one way or another.[20]
  50. A coin flip has long been used as an impartial determiner.[20]
  51. Though it seems that over a large number of trials a coin will land heads or tails an even number of times, there are some studies that suggest that a coin flip may not be a truly random event.[20]
  52. Coin flipping, coin tossing, cross and pile, or heads or tails is the practice of throwing a coin in the air to choose between two alternatives, sometimes to resolve a dispute between two parties.[21]
  53. During coin flipping the coin is tossed into the air such that it rotates end-over-end several times.[21]
  54. When the coin comes to rest, the toss is complete and the party who called or was assigned the face-up side is declared the winner.[21]
  55. In a football match, the team winning the coin toss chooses which goal to attack in the first half; the opposing team kicks off for the first half.[21]

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