How many people need to be crowded into a room before two of them are likely to have the same birthday? The answer is a mere 23 to have a fifty-fifty shot. To bring the probability to ninety-nine ...
We all get excited when we meet someone who shares the same birthday as us. It feels like you just met a kindred spirit. It’s pretty uncommon to randomly run across someone who was born on the same ...
Amazon S3 on MSN
Why the birthday paradox confuses even smart people
The birthday paradox shows a 50% chance of shared birthdays in a group of 23, revealing how human intuition often fails.
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. The birthday paradox is a beautiful piece of counter-intuitive mathematics. The answer is not what you ...
It's puzzling but true that in any group of 23 people there is a 50% chance that two share a birthday. At the World Cup in Brazil there are 32 squads, each of 23 people... so do they demonstrate the ...
Strange as it may sound, 16 of the 32 teams at the World Cup have players who share a birthday. TOKYO: Mathematicians are running the rule over the World Cup – less for the quality of the football ...
If the birthday paradox is true, 50% of the squads should have shared birthdays. Using the birthdays from Fifa's official squad lists as of Tuesday 10 June, it turns out there are indeed 16 teams with ...
Here's a fun brain teaser: How large does a random group of people have to be for there to be a 50% chance that at least two of the people will share a birthday? The answer is 23, which surprises many ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results