Chapter 4
2 events are ________________ if one event happening influences the probability of the other event happening
dependent
outcome
each individual result that is possible for a probability experiment
mutually exclusive
events that have no outcomes in common
experimental probability
if E is an event, the P(E) is where f is the frequency of event E and n is the total # of times the experiment is preformed
classical probability
if all outcomes are equally likely to occur, then P(E), is either: 1: where n(E) is the # of outcomes in the event 2: n(S) is the # of outcomes in S
2 events are _____________________ if one event happening does not influence the probability
independent
with replacement
when objects are placed back into consideration before performing the next stage of a multistage experiment
formula for classical probability
# of outcomes in an event/# of outcomes in sample space
There are 728 identical plastic chips numbered 1 through 728 in a box. What is the probability of reaching in and grabbing 544?
1/728
a ball machine contains 19 green balls, 24 red balls, 20 blue balls, and 21 yellow balls. What is the probability of getting a yellow ball?
21/19+24+20+21= 21/84= 1/4
A coin is tossed 9 times. What is the probability of getting all tails?
2^9= 512 so, 1/512
An 8 sided die has 4 colors. What is the probability of rolling a brown on the next toss? Yellow: 40 Pink: 24 Green: 21 Brown: 42
42/40+24+21+42= 42/127
569 identical chips are numbered 1 through 569. What is the probability of grabbing a number less than 478?
477/569
a dog breeder has 3 litters of puppies. What is the probability of having a puppy with no spots? Black without spots: 5 Red without spots: 8 Black with spots: 6 Red with spots: 4
5+8+6+4=23 5+8= 13 =13/23
addition rule
For any two events, E and F, the probability that E or F occurs is given by the following formula: P{E or F} = P(E) + P(F) - P(E and F)
formula for experimental probability
P(E)= f/n (f- # of times E occurs) (n- # of trials)
event
a subset of outcomes from the sample space
subjective probability
an educated guess regarding the chance that an even will occur
multistage experiment
an experiment with more than one step
probability experiment (trial)
any process with a result determined by chance
Classical or experimental probability? Selecting a 7 from a standard deck of cards
classical probability
law of large numbers
the greater the number of trials, the closer the experimental probability will be to the true probability
conditional probability P(F|E)
the probability of event F occuring given that event E occurs first
sample space (S)
the set of all possible outcomes for a given probability experiment (not the number of outcomes)
without replacement
when objects are not placed back into consideration before performing the next stage of a multistage experiment