AP Statistics Chapter 15: Probability Rules!
trial
a single attempt or realization of a random phenomenon
disjoint
shares no common outcome
independent
that the outcome of one trial does not influence outcome of another
mutually exclusive
two events that can't occur at the same time with no common outcomes
sample space
collection of all possible outcomes
tree diagram
display of conditional events or probabilities that is helpful in thinking through conditioning
Explain the difference between the Addition Rule for disjoint events and the General Addition Rule
General Addition rule does not require disjoint events? Addition rule (disjoint)- P (A or B) = P(A) + P(B) General Addition Rule- P( A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B)
If events A and B are disjoint, then P ( A u B) = P(A) + P(B). If events A and B are NOT disjoint, explain why this formula does not work
If events A and B aren't disjoint, then when you are finding probabilities, you will be counting that probability in the center twice.
In general (whether events are disjoint or not), what is the formula for finding P( A u B)
P (A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B)
State the formula for finding conditional probability
P (B/A) = P ( A and B) / P(A)
What is meant by conditional probability
Probability that takes into account a given condition is called conditional probability. P (B/A) "probability of B given A"
event
any set or collection of outcomes
What is meant by joint probability
probability of two different events that are related
conditional probability
probability that takes into account a given condition
outcome
result of a trial