Probability
Probability
c
apter Goals
After completing t is c apter, you
s ould be able to:
ƥ Explain basic probability concepts and
definitions
ƥ Examine the use of probability theory in
decision making
ƥ Apply common rules of probability
ƥ Use Bayesƞ Theorem for conditional
probabilities
ëmportant Terms
Ô
ample pace
£
3 ents
ƥ Simple event
ƛ An outcome from a sample space with one
characteristic
ƛ e.g., A red card from a deck of cards
ƥ Complement of an event A (denoted Aƞ)
ƛ All outcomes that are not part of event A
ƛ e.g., All cards that are not diamonds
ƥ Joint event
ƛ Involves two or more characteristics simultaneously
ƛ e.g., An ace that is also red from a deck of cards
utually 3clusi e 3 ents
example:
uestions:
ƥ Which of the following pairs of mutually
exclusive events in the drawing of one card
from a standard deck of 52?
r
Collectively Exhaustive Events
ƥ Collectively exhaustive events
ƛ The set of events covers the entire sample space
example:
A = aces; B = black cards;
C = diamonds; D = hearts
ü
Types of Probability
1. Classical approach
2. Relative Frequency approach
3. Subjective approach
c^
uestions:
ƥ Determine the probabilities of the following
events in drawing a card from a deck of 52
cards:
a) A seven
b) A black card
c) An ace or a king
d) A black two or a black three
e) A red face card ( king, queen or jack)
cc
uestion:
ƥ General Buck Turgidson is preparing to make his annual budget
presentation to the U.S. Senate and is speculating about his chances
of getting all or part of his requested budget approved. From his 20
years of experience in making these requests, he has deduced that
his chances of getting between 50 to 74 percent of his budget
approved are twice as good as those of getting between 75 and 99
percent approved, and two and one- one-half times as good as those of
getting between 25 and 49 percent approved. Further, the general
believes that there is no chance of less than 25 percent of his
budget being approved. Finally, the entire budget has been
approved only once during the generalƞs tenure, and the general
does not expect this pattern to change. What are the probabilities of
0-24 percent, 50-
50-74 percent, 75-
75-99 percent, and 100 percent
approval, according to the general?
c
Probability Rules
ƥ Marginal Probability
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General Addition Rule Example
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c£
uestion:
The Herr - Mc Fee Company, which produces
nuclear fuel rods, must X-
X-ray and inspect each
rod before shipping. Karen Wood, an inspector,
has noted that for every 1000 fuel rods she
inspects, 10 have interior flaws, 8 have casing
flaws, and 5 have both flaws. In her quarterly
report, Karen must include the probability of
flaws in fuel rods. What is this probability?
c
uestion:
ƥ The HAL corporation wishes to improve the resistance of its
personal computer to disk-
disk-drive and keyboard failures. At
present, the design of the computer is such that disk drive
failures occur only one-
one-third as often a keyboard failures. The
probability of simultaneous disk-
disk-drive and keyboard failures is
0.05.
ƥ Joint Probability
Õ P(AB) = P(A) X P(B)
Õ Probability tree
ƥ Conditional probability
Õ P(B
P(B|A)
|A) = P(B)
cr
uestion:
ƥ The four floodgates of a small hydroelectric
dam fail and are repaired independently of
each other. From experience, itƞs known that
each floodgate is out of order 4 percent of the
time.
ƥ Joint Probability
Õ P (BA) = P (B l A) x P(A)
= P (A l B) x P(B)
ƥ Marginal Probabilty
ƛ Sum of probabilities of all the joint events in which the
simple event occurs.
^
uestion:
ƥ During a study of auto accidents, the Highway
Safety Council found that 60 % of all
accide4nts occur at night, 52% are alcohol-
alcohol-
related, and 37 % occur at night and are
alcohol related.
c
uestion:
ƥ If a hurricane forms in the eastern half of the Gulf of
Mexico, there is a 76% chance that it will strike the
western coast of Florida. From data gathered over the
past 50 years, it has been determined that the
probability of a hurricaneƞs occurring in this area in any
given year is 0.85.
ayesƍ T eorem
ƥ Posterior probabilities
ƥ Basic formula for conditional probability under
statistical dependence is called Bayesƞ theorem.
Õ P (B l A) = P (BA) / P (A)
Ô
apter ummary
ƥ Discussed basic probability concepts
ƛ Sample spaces and events, simple probability, and
joint probability
ƥ Examined basic probability rules
ƛ General addition rule, addition rule for mutually
exclusive events, rule for collectively exhaustive
events
ƥ Defined conditional probability
ƛ Statistical independence, marginal probability,
decision trees
ƥ Discussed Bayesƞ theorem £