96
Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday: Sept. 22, 12 noon. Your TA will tell you where to hand these in

Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

  • View
    232

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Homework Assignment

• Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15• Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12• Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15• Chapter 4, Problem 16• Due a week from Friday:• Sept. 22, 12 noon.• Your TA will tell you where to hand these in

Page 2: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Random Sampling - what did we learn?

• It’s difficult to do properly• Why not just point?• Computers and random numbers• Can you tell if your numbers were random?

Page 3: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Sampling distribution of the mean

Page 4: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Sampling distribution of the mean

Page 5: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Sampling distribution of the mean

Page 6: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Sampling distribution of the mean

How confident can we be about this one estimate of the mean?

Page 7: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Estimating error of the mean

• Hard method: take a few MORE random samples, and get more estimates for the mean

• Easy method: use the formula:

SEY

=s

n

Page 8: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Confidence interval

• Confidence interval– a range of values surrounding the sample estimate that is likely to contain the population parameter

• We are 95% confident that the true mean lies in this interval

Page 9: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:
Page 10: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:
Page 11: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

= 5.14

Y = 5.26

Page 12: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

What if we calculate 95% confidence

intervals?• Approximately ± 2 S.E.• Expect that 95% of the intervals from the class will contain the true population mean, 5.14

• 70 invervals * 5% = 3.5• Expect that 3 or 4 will not contain the mean, and the rest will

Page 13: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Mean ± 95% C.I.

Page 14: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Mean ± 95% C.I.

Page 15: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

What if we took larger samples? Say, n=20 instead of n=10?

Page 16: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:
Page 17: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:
Page 18: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 19: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The Birthday Challenge

Page 20: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability

• The proportion of times the event occurs if we repeat a random trial over and over again under the same conditions

• Pr[A] – The probability of event A

Page 21: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Two events are mutually exclusive if they cannot both be

true.

Page 22: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Two events are mutually exclusive if they cannot both be

true.

(cannot both occur simultaneously)

Page 23: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

A

B

Mutually exclusive

Page 24: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

A

B

Mutually exclusive

Venn diagram

Page 25: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

A

B

Mutually exclusive

Venn diagram

Sample space

Page 26: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

A

B

Mutually exclusive

Venn diagram

Sample space

Possible outcome

Pr[B] proportionalto area

Page 27: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Mutually exclusive

Page 28: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Mutually exclusive

Pr(A and B) = 0

Page 29: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Mutually exclusive

Visual definition - areas do not overlap in Venn diagram

Page 30: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Not mutually exclusive

Pr(A and B) 0

Pr(purple AND square) 0

Page 31: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

For example

Page 32: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability distribution

A probability distribution describes the true relative

frequency of all possible values of a random variable.

Page 33: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability distribution

A probability distribution describes the true relative

frequency of all possible values of a random variable.

Random variable - a measurement that changes from one observation to the next because of chance

Page 34: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability distribution for the

outcome of a roll of a die

Number rolled

Frequency

Page 35: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability distribution for the sum of a roll of two

dice

Sum of two dice

Frequency

Page 36: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The addition rule

The addition principle: If two events A and B are mutually

exclusive, then

Pr[A OR B] = Pr[A] + Pr[B]

Page 37: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Addition Rule

Pr[1 or 2] = ?

Page 38: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Addition Rule

Pr[1 or 2] = Pr[1]+Pr[2]

Page 39: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Addition Rule

Pr[1 or 2] = Pr[1]+Pr[2]

Page 40: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Addition Rule

Pr[1 or 2] = Pr[1]+Pr[2]

Sum of areas

Page 41: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The probability of a range

For families of 8 children,

Pr[Number of boys ≥ 6] = ?

Page 42: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The probability of a range

For families of 8 children,

Pr[Number of boys ≥ 6] = Pr[6 or 7 or 8]

= Pr[6]+Pr[7]+Pr[8]

Page 43: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The probabilities of all possibilities add

to 1.

Page 44: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Addition Rule

Pr[1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6] = ?

Page 45: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Addition Rule

Pr[1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6] = 1

Page 46: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability of Not

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Pr[NOT rolling a 2] = ?

Page 47: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability of Not

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Pr[NOT rolling a 2] = 1 - Pr[2] = 5/6

Page 48: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability of Not

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Pr[NOT rolling a 2] = 1 - Pr[2] = 5/6

Pr[not A] = 1-Pr[A]

Page 49: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The addition rule

The addition principle: If two events A and B are mutually

exclusive, then

Pr[A OR B] = Pr[A] + Pr[B]

Page 50: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The addition rule

The addition principle: If two events A and B are mutually

exclusive, then

Pr[A OR B] = Pr[A] + Pr[B]

What if they are not mutually exclusive?

Page 51: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

A

B

Pr[A or B] = ?

Page 52: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

A

B

Pr[A or B] = ?

AB

Page 53: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

A

B

Pr[A or B] = ?

AB

Page 54: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

A

B

Pr[A or B] = ?

AB

Page 55: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

A

B

AB

Page 56: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

Page 57: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition RulePr[Walks or flies] = ?

Page 58: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition RulePr[Walks or flies] = ?

Page 59: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition RulePr[Walks or Flies] = Pr[Walks] + Pr[Flies]

- Pr[Walks and Flies]

Page 60: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

Pr[A OR B] = Pr[A] + Pr[B] - Pr[A AND B].

Page 61: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Independence

Two events are independent if the occurrence of one gives

no information about whether the second will occur.

Page 62: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Independence

Two events are independent if the occurrence of one gives

no information about whether the second will occur.

Equivalent definition: The occurrence of one does notchange the probability that the second will occur

Page 63: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Multiplication rule

If two events A and B are independent, then

Pr[A and B] = Pr[A] x Pr[B]

Page 64: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Pr[boy]=0.512

Pr[ (first child is a boy) AND (second child is a boy)]

= 0.512 × 0.512 = 0.262.

Page 65: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Pr[boy]=0.512

Pr[ (first child is a boy) AND (second child is a boy)]

= 0.512 × 0.512 = 0.262.

Page 66: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

General Addition Rule

Page 67: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Multiplication rule

If two events A and B are independent, then

Pr[A and B] = Pr[A] x Pr[B]

Page 68: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

OR versus AND

• OR statements:– Involve addition– It matters if the events are mutually exclusive

• AND statements:– Involve multiplication– It matters if the events are independent

Page 69: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Probability trees

Page 70: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Sex of two children family

Page 71: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Sex of two children family

Page 72: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Dependent events

Variables are not always independent; in fact they are often not

Page 73: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Fig wasps

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 74: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Fig wasps

Page 75: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Testing independence

• Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laid independent?

• Test the multiplication rule:Pr[A and B] ?=? Pr[A] x Pr[B]Pr[fig already has eggs and male] ?=?P[fig already has eggs] x Pr[male]

Page 76: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laidindependent?

Pr(male) = 0.18 + 0.04 = 0.22

Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.2

Pr(male AND fig already has eggs) = 0.18 ≠

Pr(male) x Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.22 x 0.2 = 0.044

So these two events are NOT independent.

Page 77: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laidindependent?

Pr(male) = 0.18 + 0.04 = 0.22

Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.2

Pr(male AND fig already has eggs) = 0.18 ≠

Pr(male) x Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.22 x 0.2 = 0.044

So these two events are NOT independent.

Page 78: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laidindependent?

Pr(male) = 0.18 + 0.04 = 0.22

Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.2

Pr(male AND fig already has eggs) = 0.18 ≠

Pr(male) x Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.22 x 0.2 = 0.044

So these two events are NOT independent.

Page 79: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laidindependent?

Pr(male) = 0.18 + 0.04 = 0.22

Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.2

Pr(male AND fig already has eggs) = 0.18 ≠

Pr(male) x Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.22 x 0.2 = 0.044

So these two events are NOT independent.

Page 80: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laidindependent?

Pr(male) = 0.18 + 0.04 = 0.22

Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.2

Pr(male AND fig already has eggs) = 0.18 ≠

Pr(male) x Pr(fig already has eggs) = 0.22 x 0.2 = 0.044

So these two events are NOT independent.

Page 81: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:
Page 82: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Short summary

The probability of A OR B involves addition.

P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) if the two are mutually exclusive.

The probability of A AND B involves multiplication

P(A and B) = P(A) P(B) if the two are independent

Page 83: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Conditional probability

Pr[X|Y]

Page 84: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

P(X | Y) means the probability of X if Y is true.

It is read as "the probability of X given Y."

P(female lays a male egg | fig has eggs already) = 0.9.

Page 85: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Pr X[ ] = Pr Y[ ]Pr X |Y[ ]All valuesof Y

Law of total probability:

Page 86: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The probability of a male egg is

Pr[male]=

Pr(male egg | fig has no eggs) Pr(fig has no eggs) + Pr(male egg |fig already has eggs) Pr(fig already has eggs)

= 0.05*0.8 + 0.9 (0.2) = 0.22

Page 87: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The general multiplication rule

Pr[A AND B] = Pr[A] Pr[B | A].

Page 88: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

The general multiplication rule

Pr[A AND B] = Pr[A] Pr[B | A].

Does not require independence between A and B

Page 89: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Bayes' theorem

Pr A| B[ ] =Pr B| A[ ]Pr[A]

Pr[B]

Page 90: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

In class exercise

Using data collected in 1975, the probabilit y of women being given

a biopsy having cervical cancer was 0.0001. The probabili ty that a

biopsy would corr ectly identify these women as having cancer was

0.90. The probabilities of a “false positive” (the test saying there

was cancer when there was not) was 0.001. What is the probabilit y

that a woman with a positive result actually has cancer?

Page 91: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Answer

Using data collected in 1975, the probability of women being given a biopsy havingcervical cancer was 0.0001. The probability that a biopsy would correctly identify thesewomen as having cancer was 0.90. The probabilities of a "false positi ve" (the test sayingthere was cancer when there was not) was 0.001. What is the probabilit y that a womanwith a positive result actually has cancer?

Pr[cancer | positive result] = ???

Page 92: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

AnswerPr[cancer | positive result] = Pr[positive result | cancer] Pr[cancer]

Pr[positive result]

Pr[cancer] = 0.0001

Pr[no cancer] = 1-0.0001 = 0.9999

Pr[positive result | cancer]=0.9

Pr[positive result |no cancer] = 0.001

Pr[positive result] = ???

Page 93: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Answer

Page 94: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

AnswerPr[cancer | positive result] = Pr[positive result | cancer] Pr[cancer]

Pr[positive result]

Pr[cancer] = 0.0001

Pr[no cancer] = 1-0.0001 = 0.9999

Pr[positive result | cancer]=0.9

Pr[positive result |no cancer] = 0.001

Pr[positive result] = 0.0010899

Page 95: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Answer

Pr[cancer | positive result] = (0.9)(0.0001) = 0.0826 0.0010899

Pr[cancer] = 0.0001

Pr[no cancer] = 1-0.0001 = 0.9999

Pr[positive result | cancer]=0.9

Pr[positive result |no cancer] = 0.001

Pr[positive result] = 0.0010899

Page 96: Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

Homework Assignment

• Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15• Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12• Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15• Chapter 4, Problem 16• Due a week from Friday:• Sept. 22, 12 noon.• Your TA will tell you where to hand these in