Title: Warm-up
1Warm-up
- Define the sample space of each of the following
situations - Choose a student in your class at random. Ask
how much time that student spent studying during
the past 24 hours. - The Physicians Health Study asked 11,000
physicians to take an aspirin every other day and
observed how many of them had a heart attack in a
five-year period. - In a test of new package design, you drop a
carton of a dozen eggs from a height of 1 foot
and count the number of broken eggs.
2 Section 5.2
- Independence and the Multiplication Rule
3Two Special Rules
- Weve learned the addition rule for disjoint
events If A and B are disjoint, then P(A or B)
P(A) P(B). - Now well learn the multiplication rule for
independent events that if A and B are
independent, then P(A and B) P(A)?P(B) - Remember that two events are independent if
knowing that one occurs does not change the
probability that the other occurs.
4Examples of Independent Events
- Toss a coin twice. Let A first toss is a head
and B second toss is a tail. Events A and B
are independent. Thus, the P(AnB) P(A)P(B). - P(Head and Tail) P(Head) P(Tail) ½ ½ ¼
- Draw 3 cards from a deck, replacing and shuffling
in between each draw. This is called with
replacement.
5Without Replacement
- If you draw three cards from a deck without
replacing, the probabilities change on each draw.
Therefore, drawing without replacement is NOT
independent.
6Cautions
- You must be told or have prior knowledge that an
event is disjoint or independent. - Do not confuse disjoint with independent.
Disjoint can be displayed in a Venn Diagram.
Independence can not.
- The addition rule for disjoint events and the
multiplication rule for independent events only
work when the criteria are met. Resist the
temptation to use them for events that are not
disjoint or not independent.
7Sample Questions
- Suppose that among the 6000 students at a high
school, 1500 are taking honors courses and 1800
prefer watching basketball to watching football.
If taking honors courses and preferring
basketball are independent, how many students are
both taking honors courses and prefer basketball
to football?
8Sample Questions
- Suppose that for any given year, the
probabilities that the stock market declines is
.4, and the probability that womens hemlines are
lower is .35. Suppose that the probability that
both events occur is .3. Are the two events
independent?
9Sample Questions
- In a 1974 Dear Abby letter, a woman lamented
that she had just given birth to her eighth
child, and all were girls! Her doctor had
assured her that the chance of the eighth child
being a girl was only 1 in 100. - A) What was the real probability that the eighth
child would be a girl? - B) Before the birth of the first child, what was
the probability that the woman would give birth
to eight girls in a row?
10Section 6.3General Probability Rules
11Special Probability Rules
- If A and B are disjoint, then P(AUB) P(A)
P(B). - This rule relies on a condition to be met.
- So, what if the events are NOT disjoint?
- What if there are more than 2 disjoint events?
12General Probability Rules
- P(AUB) P(A) P(B) P(AnB)
- This is how the formula will appear on your
formula sheet for the exam (and thus my tests).
If A and B are disjoint, then what does P(AnB)
equal?
13Sample Question Student Survey
- (making an A in Statistics only) 18 students
(making an A in
Calculus only) 63 students
(making an A in Stats and in Calculus)
27 students - S150 students
- Draw a Venn diagram.
- Find the probability of making an A in Stats but
not in Calc. - Find the probability of making an A in Calc but
not in Stats. - Find the probability of not making an A in either
subject. - Find the probability of making an A in either
Calc or Stats. - Are these events independent?
14Extending the Rules to Three Events
- If you have three disjoint events, then P(A or B
or C) P(A) P(B) P(C) - If they are not disjoint, then P(A or B or C)
P(A) P(B) P(C) P(AnB) P(AnC) P(BnC) - Often it is easier to draw a Venn Diagram than to
use the formula. - Look at p365 6.51
15Sample Questions
- Suppose that the probability that you will
receive an A in AP Statistics is .35, the
probability that you will receive As in both AP
Statistics and AP Biology is .19, and the
probability that you will receive an A in AP Bio
but not in Stats is .17. Which is a proper
conclusion? - A) P(A in AP Bio) .36
- B) P(you didnt take Bio) .01
- C) P(not making an A in AP Stat or Bio) .38
- D) The given probabilities are impossible.
16Sample Questions
- If P(A) .2 and P(B) .1, what is P(AUB) if A
and B are independent? - A) .02
- B) .28
- C) .30
- D) .32
- E) There is insufficient information to answer
this question.
17Sample Questions
- Given the probabilities P(A) .4 and P(AUB)
.6, what is the probability P(B) if A and B are
mutually exclusive? If A and B are independent? - A) .2, .28
- B) .2, .33
- C) .33, .2
- D) .6, .33
- E) .28, .2
18Conditional Probability
- When events are not independent, the probability
of one changes if we know that the other event
occurred. - I will draw two cards without replacement.
- Let A 1st card I draw is an Ace
- Let B 2nd card I draw is an Ace
- The probability of B occurring changes depending
on whether A occurred. - The new notation P(BA) is read the probability
of B given A. It asks you to find the
probability of B knowing that A has occurred.
19Lets look at education and age
Education Age Age Age Age
Education 25 34 35 54 55 Total
No high school 4,474 9,155 14,224 27,853
Completed HS 11,546 26,481 20,060 58,087
1 to 3 years college 10,700 22,618 11,127 44,445
4 years of college 11,066 23,183 10,596 44,845
Total 37,786 81,435 56,008 175,230
20Find these probabilities
- Let A the person chosen is 25 34
- Let B the person chosen has 4 years of
college - Find P(A).
- Find P(A and B).
- Find P(BA).
- Given that a person has only a HS diploma, what
is the probability that the person is 55 or
older?
21The general rule for multiplication
- P(AnB) P(A)P(BA)
- This can be rewritten as
- P(BA) P(AnB)/P(A)
- Example Two cards are drawn without
replacement. - Let A 1st card is a spade
- Let B 2nd card is a spade
- Find P(BA).
- Find P(A and B).
22Next Example
- Suppose the probability that the dollar falls in
value compared to the yen is 0.5. - Suppose that the probability that if the dollar
falls in value, a supplier from Japan will
renegotiate their contract is 0.7. - What is the probability that the dollar will fall
in value and the supplier demands renegotiation?
23Homework
- Chapter 5 4, 9, 40, 43, 51, 60, 83, 89, 94