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All $X$ are mutually independent and from normal distributions, each with its own mean and variance. If it's easier, $P(X_1 \geq X_i \forall i \in \{1, ..., n\})$ is fine although I suspect it's the same. If it matters, $n$ is between 5 and 20.

I found three similar questions:

  1. The answer to this onethis one is for only three random variables.
  2. The answer to this onethis one is for only mean 0 and variance 1.
  3. I'm unsure if this onethis one applies. If it does, I don't know how to apply it. Its top answer is for three random variables.

(This is not homework.)

All $X$ are mutually independent and from normal distributions, each with its own mean and variance. If it's easier, $P(X_1 \geq X_i \forall i \in \{1, ..., n\})$ is fine although I suspect it's the same. If it matters, $n$ is between 5 and 20.

I found three similar questions:

  1. The answer to this one is for only three random variables.
  2. The answer to this one is for only mean 0 and variance 1.
  3. I'm unsure if this one applies. If it does, I don't know how to apply it. Its top answer is for three random variables.

(This is not homework.)

All $X$ are mutually independent and from normal distributions, each with its own mean and variance. If it's easier, $P(X_1 \geq X_i \forall i \in \{1, ..., n\})$ is fine although I suspect it's the same. If it matters, $n$ is between 5 and 20.

I found three similar questions:

  1. The answer to this one is for only three random variables.
  2. The answer to this one is for only mean 0 and variance 1.
  3. I'm unsure if this one applies. If it does, I don't know how to apply it. Its top answer is for three random variables.

(This is not homework.)

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user10525
user10525

What is $P(X_1>X_2 and X_1>X_3 and , X_1>X_3,... and, X_1>X_n)$?

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What is $P(X_1>X_2 and X_1>X_3 and ... and X_1>X_n)$?

All $X$ are mutually independent and from normal distributions, each with its own mean and variance. If it's easier, $P(X_1 \geq X_i \forall i \in \{1, ..., n\})$ is fine although I suspect it's the same. If it matters, $n$ is between 5 and 20.

I found three similar questions:

  1. The answer to this one is for only three random variables.
  2. The answer to this one is for only mean 0 and variance 1.
  3. I'm unsure if this one applies. If it does, I don't know how to apply it. Its top answer is for three random variables.

(This is not homework.)