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Statistical Error

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Medical specialist Neil Schram, in his piece on AIDS statistics (Op-Ed Page, Aug. 24), misapprehends fundamental mathematical principles.

Taking it as axiomatic that a single act of unprotected vaginal intercourse with an infected partner carries with it a one in 500 chance of infecting the uninfected partner, Schram draws the erroneous conclusion that “500 acts of intercourse with one infected partner . . . leads to a 100% probability of infection (statistically, not necessarily in reality).”

Does Schram believe that every time a coin is tossed twice there is a 100% statistical chance that heads will come up?

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Accepting Schram’s one in 500 probability estimate, the chance that such an event will happen at least once in 500 trials is actually about a 63% statistical probability.

DAVID G. STOUGHTON

Santa Monica

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