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Let have a Poisson distribution with mean . Find [( − 1)]

and then use this to show that () = .

User LinuxLuigi
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Final answer:

The question is about calculating the expectation E[(X - 1)^2] for a Poisson distributed random variable X with mean μ. The computation shows that E[(X - 1)^2] equals the mean μ of the Poisson distribution.

Step-by-step explanation:

The student is asking about the Poisson distribution, which is a discrete probability distribution that gives the likelihood of a given number of events occurring in a fixed interval of time or space, assuming these events occur with a known constant mean rate and independently from each other. Specifically, if X is a Poisson random variable with mean μ, then the probability of X taking on a certain value k is given by the formula:


P(X = k) = μke-μ/k!

To find E[(X - 1)^2] for a Poisson random variable, we would calculate:

E[(X - 1)^2] = E[X^2] - 2E[X] + 1

Since for a Poisson distribution E[X] = Var(X) = μ, we can find E[(X - 1)^2] by substituting μ for E[X] and Var(X) resulting in:


E[(X - 1)^2] = μ + μ^2 - 2μ + 1 = μ + μ - 1 = μ


This shows that E[(X - 1)^2] is equal to the mean μ of the Poisson distribution. Note that the question is malformed, and the variables and the meaning of 'show that () = .' might be a typo, so we proceed assuming the task is to link the expectation of a transformed Poisson variable to its mean μ.

User Amitfr
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