• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Coin Tosses Are Not 50/50: Scientists Toss 350,757 Coins And Prove Old Theory

October 11, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

In sports, coin tosses are often used to decide who goes first, or pick who goes to bat for the first part of the game. 

It seems fair. You’d assume that as coins have two sides and you introduce a random element (flipping the coin and catching it), the odds of it coming up with your pick is 50/50 (or one in two). But researchers have crunched the numbers, looking at an impressive 350,757 coin tosses, and found that coin tosses are not 50/50 after all. You can tip the odds ever so slightly in your favor.

Advertisement

According to one team led by American mathematician Persi Diaconis, when you toss a coin you introduce a tiny amount of wobble to it.

“According to the Diaconis model, precession causes the coin to spend more time in the air with the initial side facing up,” a new team writes in a pre-print paper that has not yet been peer-reviewed. “Consequently, the coin has a higher chance of landing on the same side as it started (i.e., ‘same-side bias’).”

Diaconis found, from a smaller ideal number of coin tosses recorded and analyzed, that coins land on the same side they were tossed from around 51 percent of the time. The new team recruited 48 people to flip 350,757 coins from 46 different currencies, finding that overall, there was a 50.8 percent chance of the coin showing up the same side it was tossed from.



Advertisement

You can watch 12 hours of them toss the coins, if you are a masochist.

Delving into the data further, they found that coin tosses are highly variable between people, with some showing a strong same-side bias and others having none at all – coin tosses may come down (ever so slightly) to the tosser. 

ⓘ IFLScience is not responsible for content shared from external sites.

The percentage margins might not seem like much, but over time it could lead to an advantage, say if you were able to convince someone to gamble on coin flips with you for 1,000 flips in a row.

Advertisement

“The magnitude of the observed bias can be illustrated using a betting scenario,” the team explains in their discussion. “If you bet a dollar on the outcome of a coin toss (i.e., paying 1 dollar to enter, and winning either 0 or 2 dollars depending on the outcome) and repeat the bet 1,000 times, knowing the starting position of the coin toss would earn you 19 dollars on average.” 

“This is more than the casino advantage for 6 deck blackjack against an optimal-strategy player, where the casino would make 5 dollars on a comparable bet, but less than the casino advantage for single-zero roulette, where the casino would make 27 dollars on average.”

Fortunately for people who need a way to decide between two options, the team suggests a pretty simple solution.

“When coin flips are used for high-stakes decision-making, the starting position of the coin is best concealed.”

Advertisement

The study is published on pre-print server arXiv.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – Liverpool’s Klopp says Van Dijk fit, Keita fine after return to club
  2. Buy now, pay later plans not shrinking credit card loans, says TransUnion
  3. What Would Happen To Humanity If All Microbes Suddenly Disappeared?
  4. IFLScience The Big Questions: How Is Climate Change Affecting Polar Bear Populations?

Source Link: Coin Tosses Are Not 50/50: Scientists Toss 350,757 Coins And Prove Old Theory

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Don’t Pour Oil Down The Drain, There’s A Very Clever Way To Get Rid Of It
  • People Around The World Are Drinking Less Alcohol
  • Is It Better To Have One Long Walk Or Many Short Ones?
  • Where Is The World’s Largest Christmas Tree?
  • In A Monumental Scientific Effort, The Human Genome Has Been Mapped Across Time And Space In Four Dimensions
  • Can This Electronic Nose “Smell” Indoor Mould?
  • Why Does The Earth’s Closest Approach To The Sun Take Place During Winter?
  • 2025 Was The Year Humanity Got Closer Than Ever To Finding Alien Life
  • Kilauea Has Officially Been Erupting For A Year – You Can Watch Its Latest Spectacular Lava Fountains Live
  • Meet The Ladybird Spider, A “Red-Colored Oddball” With Features Never Seen Before
  • Breakthrough Listen Searched Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS For Technosignatures During Its Closest Approach To Earth
  • “Miracle” Rhinoceros Calf’s Chonky Weight Gain Offers Hope For Species
  • Would You Swap Your Festive Feast For Something Plant-Based Or Lab-Grown?
  • Rodents In The US Are Rapidly Evolving Right “Under Your Nose”
  • 39-Year-Old Discovers Raisins Don’t Come From A Raisin Tree, Gets Mercilessly Roasted By Family And The Internet
  • Hundreds Of 19th-Century Black Leather Shoes Have Mysteriously Washed Up On A Beach
  • What’s Behind The “Florida Skunk Ape” Sightings? A Black Bear, Or Something Else?
  • Hubble Telescope’s Bite Of Dracula’s Chivito Reveals Chaos In The Largest Known Planet-Forming Disk
  • All Animals, Plants, And Fungi On Earth Can Be Traced Back To A Common Ancestor: The “Asgardians”
  • The Only Known (Nearly) Complete Green Mummy Just Revealed Why It’s So Green
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version