animation (version 2.5)

quincunx: Demonstration of the Quincunx (Bean Machine/Galton Box)

Description

Simulates the quincunx with ``balls'' (beans) falling through several layers (denoted by triangles) and the distribution of the final locations at which the balls hit is denoted by a histogram; quincunx() is shows single layer, and quincunx2() is a two-stage version of the quincunx.

Usage

quincunx(balls = 200, layers = 15, pch.layers = 2, pch.balls = 19, 
    col.balls = sample(colors(), balls, TRUE), cex.balls = 2)

quincunx2(balls = 200, layers = 15, pch.layers = 2, pch.balls = 19, col.balls = sample(colors(), balls, TRUE), cex.balls = 2)

Arguments

balls

number of balls

layers

number of layers

pch.layers

point character of layers; triangles (pch = 2) are recommended

pch.balls, col.balls, cex.balls

point character, colors and magnification of balls

Value

A named vector: the frequency table for the locations of the balls. Note the names of the vector are the locations: 1.5, 2.5, ..., layers - 0.5.

Details

The bean machine, also known as the quincunx or Galton box, is a device invented by Sir Francis Galton to demonstrate the law of error and the normal distribution.

When a ball falls through a layer, it can either go to the right or left side with the probability 0.5. At last the location of all the balls will show us the bell-shaped distribution.

See Also

rbinom