Expected Value 313
This prQbability distribution function shows that there is a 20% chance of having a negative
PW. It also shows that there is a small 3.3% chance of the PW being $32,590. The three values
used to describe possible annual benefits for the project and the two values for life have been
combined to describe the uncertainty in the project's PW.
Creating a distribution, as in Example 10-6, gives us a much better understanding of
the possible PW values along with their probabilities. The three possibilities for the annual
benefit and the two for the life are representative of the much broader set of possibilities
that really exist. Optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic values are a good way to represent
the uncertainty about a variable.
Similarly the six val1.lesfor the PW represent the much broader set of possibilities. The
20% probability of a negative PW is one measure of risk that we will talk about later in the
chapter.
Some problems, such as Examples 10-3 and 10-4, have so many variables or different
outcomes that constructing the joint probability distribution is arithmetically burdensome.
If the values in Equation 10-1 are treated as a discrete probability distribution function, the
probabilities are 1/6, 2/3, 1/6. With an optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic outcome
for each of 4 variables, there are 34= 81 combinations.In Examples 10-3 and 10-4,
the salvage value has only two distinct values, so there are still 3 x 3 x 3 x 2 = 54
combinations.
When the problem is important enough, the effort to construct the joint probabil-
ity distribution is worthwhile. It gives the analyst and the decision maker a better un-.
derstanding of what may happen. It is also needed to calculate measures of a project's
risk. While spreadsheets can automate the arithmetic, simulation (described at the end
of the chapter) can be a better choice when there are a large number of variables and
combinations.
EXPECTEDVALUE
For any probability distribution we can compute the expected value (EV) or arithmetic
average (mean). To calculate the EV, each outcome is weighted by its probability, and
the results are summed. This is NOT the simple average or unweighted mean. When the
class average on a test is computed, this is an unweighted mean. Each student's test has
the same weight. This simple "average" is the one that is shown by the buttonxon many
calculators.
The expected value is a weighted average, like a student's GPA or grade point average.
For a GPA the grade in each class is weighted by the number of credits. For the expected
value of a probability distribution, the weights are the probabilities..
This is described in Equation 10-5.We saw in Example 10-4,that these expected values
can be used to compute a rate of return. They can also be used to calculate a present worth
as in Example 10-7.
Expected value=OutcomeA xpeA) + OutcomeBxPCB)+... (10-5)
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