Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Probability (Addition Rule), Exercises of Probability and Statistics

We use the addition rule to find the probability of the union of any two events: P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A and B)

Typology: Exercises

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/12/2022

anoushka
anoushka 🇺🇸

4.1

(14)

241 documents

1 / 14

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
1/9
Probability (Addition Rule)
Ryan Miller
pf3
pf4
pf5
pf8
pf9
pfa
pfd
pfe

Partial preview of the text

Download Probability (Addition Rule) and more Exercises Probability and Statistics in PDF only on Docsity!

Probability (Addition Rule)

Ryan Miller

Disjoint Events

I (^) Two events are disjoint if they have no outcomes in common I (^) Consider rolling a six-sided die, the event of rolling a six is disjoint from the event rolling an odd number

Disjoint Events

It’s easy to visually confirm this example by looking at a simple representation of the sample space:

Disjoint Events

P (Six or Odd Number) = P (Six) + P (Odd Number) = 1 / 6 + 3 / 6 = 2 / 3

The Addition Rule

I (^) In general, P ( A or B ) = P ( A ) + P ( B ) − P ( A and B ) I (^) This is known as the addition rule I (^) In the special case where events A and B are disjoint , P ( A and B ) = 0

The Addition Rule

I (^) In general, P ( A or B ) = P ( A ) + P ( B ) − P ( A and B ) I (^) This is known as the addition rule I (^) In the special case where events A and B are disjoint , P ( A and B ) = 0 I (^) In our previous examples:

P (Six or Odd Number) = P (Six) + P (Odd Number) − P (Six and Odd Number) = 1 / 6 + 3 / 6 − 0 = 2 / 3

Venn Diagrams

I (^) Venn diagrams are frequently used as a visual aid when learning the addition and complement rules I (^) The diagram below depicts survey results where 33% of college students were in a relationship (R), 25% were involved in sports (S), and 11% were in both

Venn Diagrams - Example

  1. P ( R or S ) = 0_._ 22 + 0_._ 11 + 0_._ 14 = 0_._ 47 (direct calculation)

Venn Diagrams - Example

  1. P ( R or S ) = 0_._ 22 + 0_._ 11 + 0_._ 14 = 0_._ 47 (direct calculation)
  2. P ( R or S ) = 0_._ 33 + 0_._ 25 − 0_._ 11 = 0_._ 47 (addition rule)
  3. P ( R or S ) = 1 − P (Neither) = 1 − 0_._ 53 = 0_._ 47 (complement rule)

Conclusion

We use the addition rule to find the probability of the union of any two events:

P ( A or B ) = P ( A ) + P ( B ) − P ( A and B )

If the events are independent, we know that there intersection is zero, meaning P ( A and B ) = 0 and the union of the events is simply the sum of their individual probabilities