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Quantitative Techniques – I




                    Notes          15.5 Normal Approximation to Binominal Distribution

                                   Normal distribution can be used as an approximation to binomial distribution when n is large
                                   and neither p nor q is very small. If X denotes the number of successes with probability p of a
                                   success in each of the n trials, then X will be distributed approximately normally with mean np
                                   and standard deviation  npq .

                                                           X np
                                                 Further, z       ~  N 0,1 .

                                                             npq
                                       It may be noted here that as X varies from 0 to n, the standard normal variate z would vary
                                   from    to   because
                                                   lim   np      lim    np
                                       when X = 0,
                                                  n      npq   n        q

                                                      lim  n np     lim   nq     lim   nq
                                       and when X = n,
                                                     n       npq   n      npq  n       p

                                   Correction for Continuity

                                   Since the number of successes is a discrete variable, to use normal approximation, we have make
                                   corrections for continuity. For example,

                                                                     1         1
                                   P(X    X   X ) is to be corrected as  P X 1  X  X 2  , while using normal approximation
                                     1       2                       2         2
                                   to binomial since the gap between successive values of a binomial variate is unity. Similarly,
                                                                     1         1
                                   P(X < X < X ) is to be corrected as  P X 1  X  X 2  , since X < X does not include X and
                                     1       2                       2         2        1                  1
                                   X < X does not include X .
                                       2               2
                                   Note: The normal approximation to binomial probability mass function is good when  n  50 and neither
                                   p nor q is less than 0.1.

                                          Example: An unbiased die is tossed 600 times. Use normal approximation to binomial to
                                   find the probability obtaining
                                   1.  more than 125 aces,
                                   2.  number of aces between 80 and 110,
                                   3.  exactly 150 aces.
                                   Solution:
                                   Let X denote the number of successes, i.e., the number of aces.

                                                1                       1  5
                                        np  600    100  and    npq  600       9.1
                                                6                       6  6
                                   1.  To make correction for continuity, we can write

                                                        P(X > 125) = P(X > 125 + 0.5)






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