macgyver
Bacontologist
- Joined
- May 4, 2006
- Messages
- 317
I'm curious if this can be explained to a mathematically challenged individual like me:
Standard Lotto 6/49 draw where six unique numbers from a list of 1 through 49 are randomly drawn:
Is there any less chance that the same group of 6 numbers will be randomly generated more than once?
I would intuitively think that every drawing of 6 numbers has the same odds of occurring every time. So just because a certain series of 6 is drawn, doesn't mean there's any less of a chance of the same series of numbers being drawn again.
However, there's a part of the human psyche that wants to believe that "lightening never strikes twice" so your odds are better if you were to avoid any number combination that has already been picked in the past.
Is this strictly a psychological phenomenon, or is there some truth to it?
Standard Lotto 6/49 draw where six unique numbers from a list of 1 through 49 are randomly drawn:
Is there any less chance that the same group of 6 numbers will be randomly generated more than once?
I would intuitively think that every drawing of 6 numbers has the same odds of occurring every time. So just because a certain series of 6 is drawn, doesn't mean there's any less of a chance of the same series of numbers being drawn again.
However, there's a part of the human psyche that wants to believe that "lightening never strikes twice" so your odds are better if you were to avoid any number combination that has already been picked in the past.
Is this strictly a psychological phenomenon, or is there some truth to it?