Skewed dice

Skewed dice

thingiverse

A non-uniform die. Other than a coin flip, the most common probability example in introductory classes is based on a fair, uniform 6-sided die, where we assume that all sides are uniformly equal in probability. The fundamentals of probability still hold if the assumption of uniformity is violated. Skewed dice were designed (by the author) to illustrate how pervasive the uniformity assumption is. These dice have been rolled a few hundred times to determine experimentally the probabilities of each number coming up. Further exploration of skewed dice can be found here: https://sinesofthingstocome.com/2021/08/20/skewed-dice-and-the-jims-birthday-problem/?fbclid=IwAR2RhxDRGZebnEd0PFTRic6qEtOTonSW5Yg_bfe0ZREXmJ701qrA8eY1KoQ

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