Pokemaths: The difference between probability and statistics explained
Probability is starting with a trainer and figuring out what Pokemon they will have
statistics is seeing a Pokemon and guessing the trainer.
Probability is easy. You see the trainer. You record where theyâre from and their level and deduce what Pokemon they will have. âHereâs Bug Catcher, heâs from Veridian Forest and has no badges, so will have Pokemon like thisâ. In other words âWe flip a fair coin ten times, here are the possible outcomesâ
Statistics is the opposite. We record the Pokemon and guess the trainer. A Pikachu, itâs an electric type and found in forests. Whatâre the chances itâs Mistyâs? Or âwe flip three heads and two tails, is it a fair coin?â Record the Pokemon! Each piece of data is a point in âconnect the dotsâ. The more data, the clearer the shape (1 spot in connect-the-dots isnât helpful. One data point makes it hard to find a trend.) One water-type Pokemon? Could be a few people. 3 water-types? Probably not bug-catcher. Measure the basic characteristics. Every Pokemon has a level, type, and habitat. Every data set has a mean, median, standard deviation, and so on. These universal, generic descriptions give a rough narrowing: âThe Pokemon is level 8: a beginner trainer, or a gym leader?â Find the type of trainer. There are dozens of possible trainers (probability distributions) to consider. We narrow it down with prior knowledge of the system. Surrounded by lakes? Think water-type trainers, not rock-type trainers. Dealing with yes/no questions? Consider a binomial distribution. Look up the specific animal. Once we have the distribution(âgym-leadersâ), we look up our generic measurements in a table. âSix water type Pokemon, all over level 80 is most likely owned by a water-type gym leader, like Mistyâ. The lookup table is generated from the probability distribution, i.e. making measurements when the Pokemon is captured. Make additional predictions. Once we know the trainer, we can predict future behavior and other traits (âAccording to our calculations, Misty will defeat all trainers under level 20 and have a rare-water type.â). Statistics helps us get information about the origin of the data, from the data itself.
The inspiration for this post and layout is based on a article from betterexplained.com linked here.















