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Two players, $A$ and $B$, alternately and independently flip a coin and the first player to get a head wins. Assume player $A$ flips first. If the coin is fair, what is the probability that $A$ wins?

So $A$ only flips on odd tosses. So the probability of winning would be $ P =\frac{1}{2}+\left(\frac{1}{2} \right)^{2} \frac{1}{2} + \cdots+ \left(\frac{1}{2} \right)^{2n} \frac{1}{2}$

Is that right? It seems that if $A$ only flips on odd tosses, this shouldn't matter. Either $A$ can win on his first toss, his second toss, ...., or his $n^{th}$ toss. So the third flip of the coin is actually $A$'s second toss. So shouldn't it be $P = \frac{1}{2} + \left(\frac{1}{2} \right)^{2} + \left(\frac{1}{2} \right)^{3} + \cdots$

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    Let$P$equal probability that$A$wins. Can you convince yourself that P = probability$A$wins on first toss + probability that$A$wins on third or later = 1/2 + (Probability neither A nor$B$wins in the first two tosses)P = 1/2 + (1/4)P. So P = 1/2 + (1/4)P so P = (4/3)(1/2) = 2/3. The trick is to realize that whenever it is A's turn *GIVEN* that the game hasn't ended yet the probability *at that point* is the same as it was at the very beginning. So P(A) = 1/2 + P(A|noone won in first two tosses) = 1/2 + P(noone won in first two tosses)P(A).2016-07-31

5 Answers 5

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Let $p$ be the probability that A wins. This can happen in two ways: (i) A wins immediately (probability $1/2$ or (ii) A tosses a tail, but ultimately wins.

If A tossed a tail (probability $1/2$, then in effect B is now "first" so the probability she does not win is $1-p$. We conclude that $p=\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2}(1-p).$ Solve for $p$. We get $p=2/3$.

Comment: There are nice expressions for $p$ as infinite geometric series. So we can think of the above argument as a probabilistic method for summing a very particular geometric series. By varying the probability that the coin lands heads, we can use the same idea to find the sum of any infinite geometric series, as long as the "common ratio" is positive.

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You were on track at first, but the game may go on for a very long time. You should not stop at "$2n$".

$A$ could win on the first flip of the coin, or the third, or the fifth, ...

So, the probability of $A$ winning would be the sum of the probabilities of the events $ A_i = A\text{ wins on the } i^{\rm th}\text{ flip; where }i\text { is odd}. $

If the coin is fair, $P(A_i) =\Bigl({1\over2}\Bigr)^{i-1}\cdot{1\over2} =\Bigl({1\over2}\Bigr)^i. $

Summing the probabilities above, the probability that $A$ wins is $ \sum_{i \text{ odd}} P(A_i)= \sum_{i \text { odd}} \Bigl({1\over 2}\Bigr)^i. $ The series above can be written: $ \sum_{i \text { odd}} \Bigl({1\over 2}\Bigr)^i= \sum_{i =0}^{\infty} \Bigl({1\over 2}\Bigr)^{2i+1}= {1\over 2}\sum_{i =0}^{\infty} \Bigl({1\over 4}\Bigr)^{ i }={1\over2}\cdot{4\over3}=2/3. $


You could also solve the problem this way:

Condition on what happens on the first two flips:

$A$ wins if the first flip is a head and the probability that the first flip is a head is 1/2.

$A$ loses if the first flip is a tail and the second ($B$'s turn) is a head. The probability that the first flip is a head and the second a tail is 1/4.

If the first two flips are tails, then given this, the probability that $A$ wins eventually afterwards is the same as the initial probability that $A$ wins. The probability that the first two flips are tails is 1/4.

So $ P(A) =1\cdot{1\over2}+0\cdot {1\over4}+P(A)\cdot{1\over4}. $

Solving the above for $P(A)$ gives $P(A)=2/3$.


As for your second method, I think you are forgetting that $A$ does not get a second toss if $B$ flips heads on his first toss...

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\mathsrc{A_k}={A losing in his first k tosses and B losing in his first k tosses and A winning in his k+1 toss} $\begin{align} P(\text{A winning}) &= P(\text{A winning in his first toss or } \mathrm{A_1} \text{ or } \mathrm{A_2} \text{ or } \ldots)\\ &= P(\text{A winning in his first toss}) + P(\mathrm{A_1}) + P(\mathrm{A_2}) + \dots\\ &= 0.5 + (0.5)(0.5)(0.5) + (0.5)(0.5)(0.5)(0.5)(0.5) + \dots \\ &=0.5 + (0.5)^3 + (0.5)^5 + .........\\ &= \frac{0.5}{1 - 0.25} = \frac{0.5}{0.75} = \frac{50}{75} = \frac{2}{3}\\ \end{align}$

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    There were answers with more details, better appearance, with the same final answer. Use [Help](http://meta.math.stackexchange.com/questions/5020/mathjax-basic-tutorial-and-quick-reference) please.2014-02-12
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the probability that the first head occurs on toss $n$ is $2^{-n}$ so the probability that the first head happens on an odd $n$ is $\sum_{k=0}^{\infty}2^{-(2k+1)}=(1/2)(1/(1-1/4))=2/3$

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Here is the solution for general p. Let A gets the head in Nth trial to win the game. Since he is flipping the coin in odd trials,

P(N=1) = p, P(N=3) = (1-p)^2 * p, P(N=5) = (1-p)^4 * p, and so on.

Thus P(A wins) = p + (1-p)^2 * p + (1-p)^4 * p + ... = 1/(2-p). If p = 1/2, then P(wins) = 2/3.