Title: Statistical Experiments
1Statistical Experiments
- The set of all possible outcomes of an experiment
is the Sample Space, S. - Each outcome of the experiment is an element or
member or sample point. - If the set of outcomes is finite, the outcomes in
the sample space can be listed as shown - S H, T
- S 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
- in general, S e1, e2, e3, , en
- where ei each outcome of interest
2Tree Diagram
- If the set of outcomes is finite sometimes a tree
diagram is helpful in determining the elements in
the sample space. - The tree diagram for students enrolled in the
School of Engineering by gender and degree - The sample space
- S MEGR, MIDM, MTCO, FEGR, FIDM, FTCO
3Your Turn Sample Space
- Your turn The sample space of gender and
specialization of all BSE students in the School
of Engineering is - or
- 2 genders, 6 specializations,
- 12 outcomes in the entire sample space
S FECE, MECE, FEVE, MEVE, FISE, MISE, FMAE,
etc
S BMEF, BMEM, CPEF, CPEM, ECEF, ECEM, ISEF,
ISEM
4Definition of an Event
- A subset of the sample space reflecting the
specific occurrences of interest. - Example In the sample space of gender and
specialization of all BSE students in the School
of Engineering, the event F could be the student
is female - F BMEF, CPEF, ECEF, EVEF, ISEF, MAEF
5Operations on Events
- Complement of an event, (A, if A is the event)
- If event F is students who are female,
- F BMEM, EVEM, CPEM, ECEM, ISEM, MAEM
- Intersection of two events, (A n B)
- If E environmental engineering students and F
female students, - (E n F) EVEF
- Union of two events, (A U B)
- If E environmental engineering students and I
industrial engineering students,
(E U I) EVEF, EVEM, ISEF, ISEM
6Venn Diagrams
- Mutually exclusive or disjoint events
- Male Female
- Intersection of two events
- Let Event E be EVE students (green circle)
- Let Event F be female students (red circle)
- E n F is the overlap brown area
7Other Venn Diagram Examples
- Five non-mutually exclusive events
- Subset The green circle is a subset of the
beige circle
8Subset Examples
- Students who are male
- Students who are ECE
- Students who are on the ME track in ECE
- Female students who are required to take ISE 428
to graduate - Female students in this room who are wearing
jeans - Printers in the engineering building that are
available for student use
9Sample Points
- Multiplication Rule
- If event A can occur n1 ways and event B can
occur n2 ways, then an event C that includes
both A and B can occur n1 n2 ways. - Example, if there are 6 different female students
and 6 different male students in the room, then
there are - 6 6 36 ways to
choose a team consisting of a female and a male
student .
10Permutations
- Definition an arrangement of all or part of a
set of objects. - The total number of permutations of the 6
engineering specializations in MUSE is - 654321 720
- In general, the number of permutations of n
objects is n!
NOTE 1! 1 and 0! 1
11Permutation Subsets
- In general,
- where n the total number of distinct items
and r the number of items in the subset - Given that there are 6 specializations, if we
take the number of specializations 3 at a time (n
6, r 3), the number of permutations is
12Permutation Example
- A new group, the MUSE Ambassadors, is being
formed and will consist of two students (1 male
and 1 female) from each of the BSE
specializations. If a prospective student comes
to campus, he or she will be assigned one
Ambassador at random as a guide. If three
prospective students are coming to campus on one
day, how many possible selections of Ambassador
are there? - If the outcome is defined as ambassador assigned
to student 1, ambassador assigned to student 2,
ambassador assigned to student 3 - Outcomes are A1,A2,A3 or A2,A4,A12 or A2,
A1,A3 etc - Total number of outcomes is 12P3 12!/(12-3)!
1320
13Combinations
- Selections of subsets without regard to order.
- Example How many ways can we select 3 guides
from the 12 Ambassadors? - Outcomes are A1,A2,A3 or A2,A4,A12 or A12,
A1,A3 but not A2,A1,A3 - Total number of outcomes is
- 12C3 12! / 3!(12-3)! 220
14Introduction to Probability
- The probability of an event, A is the likelihood
of that event given the entire sample space of
possible events. - P(A) target outcome / all possible outcomes
- 0 P(A) 1 P(ø) 0 P(S) 1
- For mutually exclusive events,
- P(A1 U A2 U U Ak) P(A1) P(A2) P(Ak)
15Calculating Probabilities
- Examples
- There are 26 students enrolled in a section of
EGR 252, 3 of whom are BME students. The
probability of selecting a BME student at random
off of the class roll is - P(BME) 3/26 0.1154
-
- 2. The probability of drawing 1 heart from a
standard 52-card deck is - P(heart) 13/52 1/4
16Additive Rules
- Experiment Draw one card at random from a
standard 52 card deck. What is the probability
that the card is a heart or a diamond? - Note that hearts and diamonds are mutually
exclusive. - Your turn What is the probability that the card
drawn at random is a heart or a face card
(J,Q,K)? -
17Your Turn Solution
- Experiment Draw one card at random from a
standard 52 card deck. What is the probability
that the card drawn at random is a heart or a
face card (J,Q,K)? - Note that hearts and face cards are not mutually
exclusive. -
P(H U F) P(H) P(F) P(HnF) 13/52
12/52 3/52 22/52
18Card-Playing Probability Example
- P(A) target outcome / all possible outcomes
- Suppose the experiment is being dealt 5 cards
from a 52 card deck - Suppose Event A is 3 kings and 2 jacks
- K J K J K K K K J J (combination or
perm.?) - P(A)
9.23E-06
combinations(3 kings)
combinations(2 jacks)