You would calculate the first differences of three probabilities. You
can use different symbols in a ternary diagram for example to represent
two senarios.
Kosuke
On Sun, 13 Apr 2003, Chester Lee wrote:
How would we do first differences for part b?
So we have two scenarios, and the probabilities of 1, 2, 3 would change
from scenario 1 to scenario 2.
How do we capture these differences in a ternary diagram?
So would we have a matrix of three columns, first column being the
difference of probability of 1 for scenario 1 and 2, second column
being the difference of probability of 2 for scenario 1 and 2, etc.?
I guess my question is what exactly do we do for part b?
Thanks,
Chester
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