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Independent events Two events are independent if knowing that one event is true or has happened does not change the probability of the other event. “male”

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Presentation on theme: "Independent events Two events are independent if knowing that one event is true or has happened does not change the probability of the other event. “male”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Independent events Two events are independent if knowing that one event is true or has happened does not change the probability of the other event. “male” and “get head when flipping a coin”  ?? “male” and “taller than 6 ft”  ?? “male” and “pregnant”  ?? This is completely different from the idea of events that are disjoint.

2 Sampling without replacement
Pick one frog at random from your target population and don’t put it back. Then pick another frog, etc. Artificial pond with 10 male and 10 female frogs. P(1st frog is male) = ??. If 1st frog is male, P(2nd frog is male) ??.  Here, successive picks are ??. Survey of a whole county with thousands of frogs (half males, half females). P(1st frog is male) = ??. If 1st frog is male, P(2nd frog is male) ≈ ??.  Here, successive picks are “nearly” ??.

3 Conditional probability
Conditional probabilities reflect how the probability of an event can be different if we know that some other event has occurred or is true. The conditional probability of event B, given event A is: (provided that P(A) ≠ 0) When two events A and B are independent, P(B | A) = P(B). No information is gained from the knowledge of event A.

4 Probabilities of hearing impairment and blue eyes among Dalmatian dogs.
HI = Dalmatian is hearing impaired B = Dalmatian is blue eyed Neither HI nor B 0.66 B and not HI 0.06 HI and B 0.05 HI and not B 0.23 P(HI and B) = .05 P(HI) = ?? P(B) = ?? P(HI | B) = P(HI and B) / P(B) = ?? P(HI | B) ≠ P(HI ), therefore HI and B are ??.

5 Large-scale surveys indicate that 11% of the population smokes
Large-scale surveys indicate that 11% of the population smokes. Medical researchers know that the probability that a smoker will get lung cancer is The probability that a person will get lung cancer if the person doesn’t smoke is The probability P(Lung cancer | Smoker) is A) 0.03 B) C) 0.34 D) E) 0.97 Are “Smoker” and “Lung cancer” independent?? A) Yes B) No Why??

6 Non-smoker and no Lung cancer
Large-scale surveys indicate that 11% of the population smokes. Medical researchers know that the probability that a smoker will get lung cancer is The probability that a person will get lung cancer if the person doesn’t smoke is 0.03. Lung cancer Non-smoker and no Lung cancer Smoker 0.11 0.34 = P(Lung cancer | Smoker) is the fraction of smokers (the orange circle) that will get lung cancer (the blue dots that are within the orange circle). This is why by definition P(Lung cancer | Smoker) = P(Lung cancer and Smoker)/P(Smoker).

7 Multiplication rule General multiplication rule:
The probability that any two events, A and B, both occur is: P(A and B) = P(A)P(B|A) Multiplication rule for independent events: If A and B are independent, then: P(A and B) = P(A)P(B)

8 Artificial pond with 10 male and 10 female frogs
Successive captures are not independent. Probability of randomly capturing 2 male frogs in a row: P(male and male) =?? Blood donation center Unrelated visitors are independent. Probability that the next two unrelated visitors are both type O: P(O and O) = ??

9 Tree diagrams Tree diagrams are used to represent probabilities graphically and facilitate computations. Probabilities of skin cancer among men and women by body locations. Man Woman In a random individual with skin cancer: P(head) = ?? P(trunk) = ?? P(limbs) = ?? % in each group who are women: P(woman | head) = ?? P(woman | trunk) = ?? P(woman | limbs) = ?? 0.44 0.56 Head Trunk Limbs 0.15 0.44 0.63 0.37 Man Woman 0.41 0.20 0.80 Man Woman

10 Skin cancer example) P(H) = ??; P(H|M) = ??
Bayes’s Theorem: 𝑃 𝐴 𝑗 𝐵 = 𝑃 𝐵∩ 𝐴 𝑗 𝑃(𝐵) = 𝑃( 𝐴 𝑗 )𝑃(𝐵| 𝐴 𝑗 ) 𝑖=1 𝑘 𝑃( 𝐴 𝑖 )𝑃(𝐵| 𝐴 𝑖 ) where A1, A2, … , Ak nonzero mutually exclusive & exhaustive events, B any other event w/ P(B)≠0, P(B)≠1 but P(B) not given directly. P(Aj) prior probability; 𝑃( 𝐴 𝑗 |𝐵) posterior probability. Skin cancer example) P(H) = ??; P(H|M) = ?? Q) Mutually exclusive and exhaustive events that include H?? Q) Role of M?? How to compute P(M)?? P(M) = ?? P(H|M) = ??

11 Diagnosis tests Diagnosis sensitivity Disease prevalence
No disease Individual Positive Negative True positive False negative False positive True negative If a person gets a positive test result, what is the probability that he/she actually has the disease? This is the positive predictive value: PPV = P(disease | positive test) Diagnosis specificity

12 HIV-AIDS: Suppose that about 1% of a large population has HIV-AIDS antibodies.
The enzyme immuno-assay test has sensitivity and specificity Diagnosis sensitivity Disease prevalence Positive True positive .9985 HIV antibodies .01 .0015 Negative False negative Random adult taking the test Positive False positive .99 .006 No HIV antibodies Incidence of HIV-AIDS in the general population .994 Negative True negative Diagnosis specificity HIV-test performance If a person who takes this test gets a positive test result, what is the probability that he or she actually has HIV-AIDS, P(HIV-AIDS | positive test)?

13 PPV = P(disease | positive)
Diagnosis sensitivity What’s the positive predictive value of the enzyme immuno-assay test for HIV-AIDS? PPV = P(disease | positive) Disease incidence .9985 Positive HIV antibodies .01 .0015 Negative False negative Random adult taking the test .0060 Positive False positive .99 No HIV antibodies Incidence of HIV-AIDS in general population .9940 Negative Diagnosis specificity HIV-test performance P(true positive) = P(disease and positive) = P(disease)P(positive | disease) = ?? P(false positive) = P(no disease and positive) = P(no disease)P(positive | no disease) =?? PPV = P(disease | positive) = P(disease and positive) / P(positive) = P(true positive) / P(all positives) =??

14 What is the rate of prostate cancer among mature men? P(cancer)= ??
How “sensitive” is the PSA test? P(+ | cancer)= ?? How “specific” is the PSA test? P(– | no cancer)= ?? If a man gets an elevated PSA test (+), what is the probability that he has prostate cancer? PPV = P(cancer | +)= ??


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