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Probability Introduction Precalc 4/20/12
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Vocabulary Probability – the chance that a particular outcome or event will occur. It can be written as a decimal between 0 and 1, or a percent between 0% and 100%. Equally likely – when multiple outcomes all have the same probability of occuring. Example: When rolling a die, getting a 1,2,3,4,5, or 6 are all equally likely. Disjoint – 2 or more events that cannot both occur at once. Example: In 2012, your birthday could fall on a weekend or a weekday, but not both.
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Notation & Vocabulary P(x) = the probability that event “x” will occur. Example: P(rain) is the probability that it will rain. Complement of “x” – all of the outcomes that are not “x” x’ – Complement of “x” This means event x does not occur. P (x’) = the probability that event x will not occur. Example: When rolling a die, P(even’) is the probability that you will roll a number that is not even.
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Calculating Probability When all events are equally likely, P(x) = the number of ways for x to occur the total number of possible outcomes
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Example: Equally likely outcomes You have a box of pencils. There are: 6 orange pencils 4 red pencils 9 blue pencils, and 1 green pencil. What are 2 disjoint events? If you choose a pencil randomly, what is the probability that it is orange? P(orange) = 6/ 20 = 3/10 =.3 = 30%
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Calculating Probability: Disjoint outcomes When two events are disjoint, the probability of one or the other occurring is the sum of the probability of each one. Example: P (orange or red) = P (orange) + P (red) = 6/20 + 4/20 = 10/20 = 50% What is P (red or green)? P( red or green) = P (red) + P (green) = 4/20 + 1/20 = 5/20 = ¼ =.25 = 25%
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