MerakSpielman said:
I guess your post really has 2 "solutions." I was talking about the second one.
Merak, this is for you, "Piel", and who ever else gives a damn. The reason the whole girl/boy thing has two answers is due to a statistical construct known as "MUTALLY EXCLUSIVE". Now, being the genius that I am, I actually took Stat twice! Well, OK, it's because I failed it the first time. But ANYWAY.....
Do a web search for statistics and put in "mutually exclusive" with it. Basically, it's a rule that determines AHEAD OF TIME whether or not the result of the first trial influences the second trial. I'm no wiz on these things, but I'm going to go out on a limb and say that Merak's answer assumes that the variables ARE mutually exclusive (i.e., the first and second trials do not influence one another).
Piel's (sorry for the abbreviation!) answer assumes NON-mutual exclusivity. Basically, the whole AA, AB, BA, BB thing was shown with the help of Gregor Mendel and his genetics experiments with pea pods in the 1800's (?).
Now PRIOR TO the trials, there exists an EQUAL probability for boys and girls. That is:
.25 for a boy, then a girl
.25 for a girl, then a boy
.25 for a boy, then a boy
.25 for a girl, then a girl
Assuming that by having a girl we increase the chance of the gender of the next child to be a boy is silly UNLESS we state AHEAD OF TIME that the probabilities ARE NOT mutually exclusive, that is, that they ARE dependent upon each other.
I'm no great teacher of stats, so don't take my word for it. But please, do the research yourself and you'll hopefully stumble across a more comprehendable explanation.