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Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions
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Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Ch. 6: Discrete Probability--Questions

Page 2: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Probability Assignment

• Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment.

• Assignment by relative frequency –

P(A) = Relative Frequency =

• Assignment for equally likely outcomes

n

f

Number of Outcomes Favorable to Event ( )

Total Number of Outcomes

AP A

Page 3: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

One Die• Experimental Probability (Relative Frequency)

– If the class rolled one die 300 times and it came up a “4” 50 times, we’d say P(4)= _____

– The Law of Large numbers would say that our experimental results would approximate our theoretical answer.

• Theoretical Probability– Sample Space (outcomes): 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6– P(4) = ____– P(even) = ___

Page 4: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Two Dice

• Experimental Probability– “Team A” problem on the experiment: If we rolled

a sum of “6, 7, 8, or 9” 122 times out of 218 attempts, P(6,7,8, or 9)= 122/218= 56%

– Questions: What sums are possible?– Were all sums equally likely?– Which sums were most likely and why?– Use this to develop a theoretical probability– List some ways you could get a sum of 6…

Page 5: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Outcomes

• For example, to get a sum of 6, you could get:

Page 6: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Two Dice – Theoretical Probability

• Each die has 6 sides.• How many outcomes are there for 2 sides?

(Example: “1, 1”)• Should we count “4,2” and “2,4” separately?

Page 7: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Sample Space for 2 Dice

List the outcomes in the sample space

If Team A= 6, 7, 8, 9, find P(Team A)

Page 8: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Two Dice- Team A/B

• P(Team A)= ___• P(Team B) = ___• Notice that P(Team A)+P(Team B) = ___

Page 9: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Some Probability Rules and Facts

• 0<= P(A) <= 1• Think of some examples where

– P(A)=0 P(A) = 1• The sum of all possible probabilities for an

experiment is 1. Ex: P(Team A)+P(Team B) =1

Page 10: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

One Coin

• Experimental– If you tossed one coin 1000 times, and 505 times

came up heads, you’d say P(H)= ___– The Law of Large Numbers would say that this

fraction would approach the theoretical answer as n got larger.

• Theoretical– Since there are only 2 equally likely outcomes,

P(H)= ___

Page 11: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Two Coins

• Experimental Results– P(0 heads) = – P(1 head, 1 tail)=– P(2 heads)=– Note: These all sum to 1.

• Questions:– Why is “1 head” more likely than “2 heads”?

Page 12: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Two Coins- Theoretical Answer

• Outcomes:

Page 13: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

2 Coins- Theoretical answer

P(0 heads) = ___P(1 head, 1 tail)= 2/4 = ___P(2 heads)= ___

Note: sum of these outcomes is ___

Page 14: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Three Coins

• Are “1 head” , “2 heads”, and “3 heads” all equally likely?

• Which are most likely and why?

Page 15: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Three Coins1 2 3

Page 16: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

3 coins

• P(0 heads)=• P(1 head)= • P(2 heads)=• P(3 heads)=

• Note: sum is ____

Page 17: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Cards• 4 suits, 13 denominations; 4*13=52 cards• picture = J, Q, K

A 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 J Q KHeart (red)

Diamond (red)Clubs (black)Spades (black)

Page 18: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

When picking one card, find…

• P(heart)=• P(king)=• P(picture card)=• P(king or queen)=• P(king or heart)=

Page 19: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

P(A or B)

• If A and B are mutually exclusive (can’t happen together, as in the king/queen example), then P(A or B)=P(A) + P(B)

• If A and B are NOT mutually exclusive (can happen together, as in the king/heart example), P(A or B)=P(A) + P(B) –P(A and B)

Page 20: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

P (A and B)

• For independent events: P(A and B)• P(A and B) = P(A) * P(B)

• In General:• P(A and B) = P(A) * P(B/given A)

Page 21: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

2 cards (independent) -questions

• Example: Pick two cards, WITH replacement from a deck of cards,

• P(king and king)=• P(2 hearts) =

Page 22: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

P(A and B) Example-- Independent• For independent events: P(A and B)• P(A and B) = P(A) * P(B)• Example: Pick two cards, WITH replacement

from a deck of cards, • P(king and king)= ___• P(2 hearts) = ____

Page 23: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

P(A and B) – Dependent (without replacement)

• In General:• P(A and B) = P(A) * P(B/given A)• Example: Pick two cards, WITHOUT

replacement from a deck of cards, • P(king and king)= ____• P(heart and heart)= ____• P(king and queen) = ___

Page 24: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Conditional Probability

Wore seat belt

No seat belt Total

Driver survived

412,368 162,527 574,895

Driver died 510 1601 2111

Total 412,878 164,128 577,006

Find: P(driver died)=P(driver died/given no seat belt)=P(no seat belt)= P(no seat belt/given driver died)=

Page 25: Ch. 6: Discrete Probability-- Questions. Probability Assignment Assignment by intuition – based on intuition, experience, or judgment. Assignment by relative.

Wore seat belt

No seat belt

Total

Driver survived

412,368 162,527 574,895

Driver died

510 1601 2111

Total 412,878 164,128 577,006

• P(driver died)= ___• P(driver died/given no seat belt)= ___• P(no seat belt)= ___• P(no seat belt/given driver died)= ___