EBal got the answer, here's the reason: X has the same distribution as F^{-1}(U), where U is uniformly distributed over [0,1], so E[F(X)] = E[F(F^{-1}(U))] = E = 1/2, since F is continuous by assumption.
QuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: bearish[...] it is hard to improve on EBal's brevity.You could try removing the question mark. 0.5And the zero..5
QuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaQuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: bearish[...] it is hard to improve on EBal's brevity.You could try removing the question mark. 0.5And the zero..5Yes, how sloppy.
QuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaQuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: bearish[...] it is hard to improve on EBal's brevity.You could try removing the question mark. 0.5And the zero..5Yes, how sloppy.Yeah....he could have answered under 1 minute....took 32.
QuoteOriginally posted by: FritzJacobQuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaQuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: bearish[...] it is hard to improve on EBal's brevity.You could try removing the question mark. 0.5And the zero..5Yes, how sloppy.Yeah....he could have answered under 1 minute....took 32. Maybe he wanted to check the round-off errors.
QuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: FritzJacobQuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaQuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: bearish[...] it is hard to improve on EBal's brevity.You could try removing the question mark. 0.5And the zero..5Yes, how sloppy.Yeah....he could have answered under 1 minute....took 32. Maybe he wanted to check the round-off errors.0.25^(1.0/2.0)
QuoteOriginally posted by: UltravioletAlternatively [$]dF(x)/dx = \rho(x)[$][$]E[F(X)] = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} F(x)\rho(x) dx = \int_0^1 F(x) dF(x) = \int_0^1 t dt = 1/2[$]Is it possible to get the answer using geometry?
QuoteOriginally posted by: CuchulainnQuoteOriginally posted by: UltravioletAlternatively [$]dF(x)/dx = \rho(x)[$][$]E[F(X)] = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} F(x)\rho(x) dx = \int_0^1 F(x) dF(x) = \int_0^1 t dt = 1/2[$]Is it possible to get the answer using geometry?When F(x) is plotted against its own "probability density" pdf_F(x), we get a rectangle.E[F(x)] = half the area of this rectangle = 0.5*1*1= 0.5
Last edited by FritzJacob on November 17th, 2013, 11:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
here is a symmetry argument: simply consider two i.i.d. random variables labeled as X and x, what is the probability of X < x?note this indeed highlights what kinnally said above that the CDF needs to be continuous for the answer to be 1/2, i.e., the PDF has no point mass (Dirac delta) thus Pr(X=x) would be zero