I found this on the rec.gambling newsgroup......kinda interesting when applied to lottery numbers
Here is something that you may already be aware of, but if you have
not heard of Benford's Law before, you will find this of interest
(and hard to believe!!!)
Intuitively, most people assume that in a string of numbers sampled randomly
from some body of data, the first non-zero digit could be any number from
1 through 9. All nine numbers would be regarded as equally probable.
But, as Dr. Benford discovered, this is not so.
Given a string of numbers, the chance that the first digit will be 1 is not
one in
nine, as you would imagine; according to Benford's Law, it is 30.1 percent,
or
nearly one in three. The chance that the first number in the string will be
2 is
only 17.6 percent, and the probabilities that successive numbers will be the
first
digit decline smoothly up to 9, which has only a 4.6 percent chance.
So what I hear you say, well the income tax agencies of several nations and
several US states, large companies and accounting businesses are using
detection software based on Benford's Law as a powerful and relatively
simple
tool for pointing suspicion at frauds, embezzlers, tax evaders, sloppy
accountants
and even computer bugs.
So what are the probabilities of the first digits. Well it follows the
following
formula : the probability of any number "d" from 1 through 9 being the first
digit
is log to the base 10 of (1 + 1/d). i.e.
Digit Probability
1 30.10%
2 17.61%
3 12.49%
4 9.69%
5 7.92%
6 6.69%
7 5.80%
8 5.12%
9 4.58%
Hard to believe but true. We (some friends and I) have tested it on a sample
size
of 8,000, 55,000 and 65,000 numbers, and it all closely matches the above.
Further reading
http://www.rexswain.com/benford.html
http://www.math.yorku.ca/Who/Faculty/Brettler/bc_98/benford.html
http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath302/kmath302.htm
Here is something that you may already be aware of, but if you have
not heard of Benford's Law before, you will find this of interest
(and hard to believe!!!)
Intuitively, most people assume that in a string of numbers sampled randomly
from some body of data, the first non-zero digit could be any number from
1 through 9. All nine numbers would be regarded as equally probable.
But, as Dr. Benford discovered, this is not so.
Given a string of numbers, the chance that the first digit will be 1 is not
one in
nine, as you would imagine; according to Benford's Law, it is 30.1 percent,
or
nearly one in three. The chance that the first number in the string will be
2 is
only 17.6 percent, and the probabilities that successive numbers will be the
first
digit decline smoothly up to 9, which has only a 4.6 percent chance.
So what I hear you say, well the income tax agencies of several nations and
several US states, large companies and accounting businesses are using
detection software based on Benford's Law as a powerful and relatively
simple
tool for pointing suspicion at frauds, embezzlers, tax evaders, sloppy
accountants
and even computer bugs.
So what are the probabilities of the first digits. Well it follows the
following
formula : the probability of any number "d" from 1 through 9 being the first
digit
is log to the base 10 of (1 + 1/d). i.e.
Digit Probability
1 30.10%
2 17.61%
3 12.49%
4 9.69%
5 7.92%
6 6.69%
7 5.80%
8 5.12%
9 4.58%
Hard to believe but true. We (some friends and I) have tested it on a sample
size
of 8,000, 55,000 and 65,000 numbers, and it all closely matches the above.
Further reading
http://www.rexswain.com/benford.html
http://www.math.yorku.ca/Who/Faculty/Brettler/bc_98/benford.html
http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath302/kmath302.htm
.
.

Glad you liked that site ...the credit for it goes to a gentleman named Jack as he was the one who first posted it. There certainly is a huge amount of information there...I only wish I had the smarts to comprehend it....Math was a nightmare for me
....and I've never really needed it since