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Published bySuzanna Katrina Willis Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapters 14/15 AP Statistics Mrs. Wolfe
PROBABILITY RULES Chapters 14/15 AP Statistics Mrs. Wolfe
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What is probability? Probability is the long run relative frequency
of some occurrence Probability of event A = P(A) P(A)= number of successful outcomes number of total outcomes
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Example 1: Imagine that a bowl contains the following Marbles: 4 green, 2 blue, 3 white, 1 red. P(Green) = ? P(Red or blue)= ? P(not white) = ? P (green and blue)= ?
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Important words in Probability
OR—means to add also means the UNION(U) of sets A and B P(A U B) = P(A) + P(B)- P(A∩ B)
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AND--means to multiply
2nd Important Word AND--means to multiply also means the INTERSECTION (∩) of sets A and B P(A ∩ B) = P(A) ∙ P(B) assumes A and B are INDEPENDENT
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NOT—means to subtract from 1 or from 100%
3rd Important Word NOT—means to subtract from 1 or from 100% A c or Ā or A’=the complement of A P(Ac) = 1 – P(A)
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KEY VOCABULARY Trial—a single attempt of a random occurrence Outcome—the value measured or observed for an individual trial Event—a collection of outcomes-designated with capital letters A, B, C, etc. Sample Space—collection of all outcomes possible
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TYPES OF PROBABILITY Theoretical—mathematical computation
involved to determine what should happen Empirical—experiment performed to count chance of event happening Subjective—educated guess –no real probability theory used
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LAW OF LARGE NUMBERS In the long run, empirical probability will settle down toward the theoretical probability. Does not mean that the “Law of Averages” will be true…just because a coin hasn’t been heads in 5 tries, it still has a 50% chance of being heads on the next try!
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PROPERTIES OF PROBABILITY
Probability of all outcomes must sum to 1. 2. 0 < P(x) < 1
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EXAMPLE USING VENN DIAGRAMS
Police reports that 78% of drivers stopped on suspicion of drunk driving are given a breath test, 36% a blood test and 22% are given both tests. What is the probability of a. a test? b. a blood test or a breath test, but not both? c. neither test?
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Important Event Concepts
Disjoint Events—also called mutually exclusive means that A and B share no common outcomes Independent Events—how one event occurs does not affect the probability of the second event
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Independent? Mutually exclusive?
Given P(A) = 0.6 and P(B) = 0.3. P (A U B) = Are A and B mutually exclusive? P(A ∩ B) = Are A and B independent?
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Blood type problem 45% type O, 40% type A, 11% type B, 4% type AB What is the probability of a person being Type A and Type O? What is the probability of two persons in a row being Type A?
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Car Problem Review Suppose 40% of cars in your area are manufactured in the US, 30% in Japan, 10% in Germany and 20% in other countries. If a car is selected at random, find a. P(car not US made) b. P(car from Japan or Germany) c. P(two cars in a row from Japan) d. P(at least one of three cars is US made)
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CONDITIONAL PROBABILITY-CHART
Public Private Total Male Female Totals
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