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Material Taken From: Mathematics for the international student Mathematical Studies SL Mal Coad, Glen Whiffen, John Owen, Robert Haese, Sandra Haese and Mark Bruce Haese and Haese Publications, 2004 Topic 3 – Logic, Sets and Probability 3.6 – Probability A Basic Probability Theory Probability • The study of the chance of an event(s) happening • The branch of mathematics that analyzes random experiments Random Experiment • One in which we cannot predict the precise outcome • Examples include; flipping a coin, rolling a die or predicting who will will the next World Cup • Although it is impossible to predict the outcome precisely, it is possible to: I. List the set of possible outcomes of the experiment II. Decide how likely a particular outcome may be Basic Probability Theory Random Experiment List the set of possible outcomes of the experiment: • Coin Flip – {H, T} – P(H) or P(T) • Die Roll – {1,2,3,4,5,6} – P(1), P(2), P(3) … • Draw a Card – {1❤️, 2❤️, 3❤️…} – P(1❤️), P(2❤️) … In the nomenclature P(E) the P stands for probability while the E is the outcome or event. Thus P(E) is the probability of a particular event occurring. Basic Probability Theory success P(E) total Example: In a coin flip what is the probability of getting a heads? • Total different outcomes – {H, T} = 2 • Total events – (H) = 1 1 • Thus P(H) = = 0.5 = 50% 2 Note: a probability can be expressed as a fraction, decimal, or a percent. Basic Probability Theory success P(E) total Example: In a die toss what is the probability of getting an even? • Total different outcomes – {1,2,3,4,5,6} = 6 • Total events – (2,4,6) = 3 3 • Thus P(H) = = 0.5 = 50% 6 Note: a probability can be expressed as a fraction, decimal, or a percent. Basic Probability Theory This can also be represented in a Venn diagram. U A 4 2 1 6 3 Set U = {all numbers on a die} Set A = {even numbers on a die} 5 P(A) = 𝒏(𝑨) 𝒏(𝑼) = 3 6 = 0.5 Basic Probability Theory If all of the equally likely possible outcomes of a random experiment can be listed as U, the universal set, and an event A is defined and represented by a set A, then: P(A) = 𝒏(𝑨) 𝒏(𝑼) There are 3 consequences for this law: 𝒏(𝑼) 1. P(A) = =1 The probability of a certain event is 1 𝒏(𝑼) 2. P(∅) = 𝒏(∅) 𝒏(𝑼) =0 3. 0 ≤ P(A) ≤ 1 The probability of an impossible event is 0 The probability of an event always lies between 0 and 1 Basic Probability Theory Impossible and Certain If P(E) = 0, then the event cannot occur. It is impossible. If P(E) = 1, then the event must occur. It is certain. 0 P( E ) 1 Basic Probability Theory Practice Find the probability that these events occur for the random experiment ‘rolling a fair dice.’ a) b) c) d) Rolling an odd number Rolling an even prime number Rolling an odd prime number Rolling a number that is either prime or even Basic Probability Theory Practice: A ticket is randomly selected from a basket containing 3 green, 4 yellow and 5 blue tickets. Determine the probability of getting: a) b) c) d) a green ticket a green or yellow ticket an orange ticket a green, yellow or blue ticket Basic Probability Theory Practice: A ordinary 6-sided die is rolled once. Determine the chance of: a) b) c) d) getting a 6 getting a 1 or 2 not getting a 6 not getting a 1 or 2 Basic Probability Theory Practice: A bag has 20 coins numbered from 1 to 20. A coin is drawn at random and its number is noted. a) P (even) = b) P (divisible by 3) = a) P (divisible by 3 or 5) = Basic Probability Theory Practice: A family has three children. a) List the sample space for the gender of the children. Find: b) P (3 boys) c) P (2 boys and 1 girl) d) P (at least 2 girls) Basic Probability Theory Complementary Events For complementary events: P(A’) = 1 – P(A) Example: What is the probability of not randomly drawing a queen in a deck of cards? Solution: Probability of drawing a queen is P(Q) = Thus, not drawing a queen is P(Q’) = 1 – 4 52 4 52 = 48 52 = 12 13 Basic Probability Theory Combined Events For combined events: P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) – P(A ∩ B) Example: 50 people are members at a gym. 28 of those people play tennis. 14 of those people play basketball and 7 play both tennis and basketball. What is the probability that a randomly selected person plays tennis or basketball? Solution: 28 14 • P(T) = , P(B) = , P(T ∩ B) = • 28 50 + 50 14 50 - 7 50 = 50 35 50 = 7 10 7 50 Basic Probability Theory Combined Events - Practice Basic Probability Theory Combined Events - Practice 100 people were surveyed: • 72 people have had a beach holiday • 16 have had a skiing holiday • 12 have had both What is the probability that a person chosen has had a beach holiday or a ski holiday? Basic Probability Theory Combined Events - Practice If P(A) = 0.6 and P(A B) = 0.7 and P(A B) = 0.3, find P(B). Conditional Probability Let’s say there is a class: In this class of 25 students, With Venn Diagrams, we’ve: 16 study French, 11 study But what if we addMalay a condition? and 4 study neither. F U Been to find the What is the probability thatable a student M probability chosen at random studies French,of: given • A student studies F and M studies Malay? 10 that 6 the student 5 • A student studies only 1 4 • • language A student studies no language A student doesn’t study F Conditional Probability What is the probability that a student chosen at random studies French, given that the student studies Malay? In this class of 25 students, 16 study French, 11 study Malay and 4 study neither. U F M 10 6 5 4 This is conditional probability and is written P (F∣M) Conditional Probability Given that M has definitely occurred we are restricted to the set M (shaded) not the universal set. U F M 10 6 5 In this class of 25 students, 16 study French, 11 study Malay and 4 study neither. If we want to determine the probability that F has also occurred we are restricted to the intersection of F and M P (F∣M) = 4 𝒏 (𝑭∩𝑴) 𝒏(𝑴) = 𝟔 𝟏𝟏 Conditional Probability For conditional probability: The conditional probability that A occurs given that B has occurred is written as P (A∣B) and is defined as: P (A∣B) = 𝑷 (𝑨∩𝑩) 𝑷(𝑩) Conditional Probability Practice In a class of 29 students, 20 study French, 15 study Malay, and 8 students study both languages. A student is chosen from random from the class. Find the probability that the student: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Studies French Studies neither language Studies at least one language Studies both languages Studies Malay given that they study French Studies French given that they study Malay Studies both languages given that they study at least one language. Conditional Probability Practice: In a class of 25 students, 14 like pizza and 16 like iced coffee. One student likes neither and 6 students like both. One student is randomly selected from the class. What is the probability that the student: a) likes pizza b) likes pizza given that he/she likes iced coffee? Conditional Probability Practice: In a class of 40, 34 like bananas, 22 like pineapples and 2 dislike both fruits. If a student is randomly selected find the probability that the student: a) Likes both fruits b) Likes bananas given that he/she likes pineapples c) Dislikes pineapples given that he/she likes bananas Conditional Probability Practice: The top shelf of a cupboard contains 3 cans of pumpkin soup and 2 cans of chicken soup. The bottom self contains 4 cans of pumpkin soup and 1 can of chicken soup. Lukas is twice as likely to take a can from the bottom shelf as he is from the top shelf . If he takes one can without looking at the label, determine the probability that it: a) is chicken b) was taken from the top shelf given that it is chicken Mutually Exclusive Events • A bag of candy contains 12 red candies and 8 yellow candies. • Can you select one candy that is both red and yellow? Mutually Exclusive Events Two events, A and B are mutually exclusive if whenever A occurs it is impossible for B to occur and vice-versa. • Events such as A and A’ must be mutually exclusive. • If events A and B are mutually exclusive, then A ∩ B = ∅ Events A and B are mutually exclusive if and only if P(A ∩ B) = 0 Mutually Exclusive Events Practice The numbers 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 are each written on on identical piece of card and placed in a bag. A random experiment is: a random card is selected at random from the bag. Let A be the event ‘a prime number is chosen’ and B the event ‘an even number is chosen.’ a) Draw a Venn diagram that describes the random experiment. b) Determine whether the events A and B are mutually exclusive. Mutually Exclusive Events Please Note: If events are mutually exclusive, then the probability of either one event or the other event occurring is given by: P( A B) P( A) P( B) P(either A or B) = P(A) + P(B) Mutually Exclusive Events Practice: Of the 31 people on a bus tour, 7 were born in Scotland and 5 were born in Wales. a) Are these events mutually exclusive? b) If a person is chosen at random, find the probability that he or she was born in: i. Scotland ii. Wales iii. Scotland or Wales Independent Events • Events where the occurrence of one of the events ______ does _____ not affect the occurrence of the other event. A and B are independent if and only if: P(A ∩ B) = P(A) × P(B) P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B) “and” → multiplication P(A and B and C) = P(A) × P(B) × P(C) Independent Events • If one student in the class was born on June 1st can another student also be born on June 1st? • If you roll a die and get a 6, can you flip a coin and get tails? Independent Events Practice The numbers 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 are each written on on identical piece of card and placed in a bag. A card is selected from random from the bag. Let A be the event ‘an odd number is chosen’ and B the event ‘a square number is chosen.’ a) Draw a Venn diagram to represent the experiment. b) Determine whether the events A and B are independent. Independent Events Practice: A coin and a die are tossed simultaneously. Determine the probability of getting heads and a 3. Independent Events Practice: There are 9 brown boxes and 6 red boxes on a shelf. Anna chooses a box and replaces it. Brian does the same thing. What is the probability that Anna and Brian choose a brown box? Independent Events Practice P (B) = 1/3 and P(A B) = p P (A) = ½ Find p if: a) A and B are mutually exclusive b) A and B are independent Dependent Events There are 9 brown boxes and 6 red boxes on a shelf. What if Anna choose the box and did not replace it? Then Brian’s event of choosing a box becomes dependent. If Anna chooses red, If Anna chooses brown, P(Brian chooses brown) = 9 14 P(Brian chooses brown) = 8 14 P(Anna then Brian choose brown) 9 8 15 14 12 35 Dependent Events • Events where the occurrence of one of the does affect the occurrence of the events ______ other event. P(A then B) = P(A) × P(B given that A has occurred) Dependent Events Practice: A box contains 4 red and 2 yellow tickets. Two tickets are randomly selected one by one from the box, without replacement. Find the probability that: (a) both are red (b) the first is red and the second is yellow. Dependent Events Practice: A hat contains tickets with numbers 1, 2, 3, … , 19, 20 printed on them. If 3 tickets are draw from the hat, without replacement, determine the probability that all are prime numbers. Basic Probability Theory Experimental Probability • One way to determine probability is to do an experiment and analyze the results. • Trials = the total number of times the experiment is repeated. • Outcomes = the different results possible for one trial of the experiment Basic Probability Theory Experiment 1 Experimental Theoretical • Toss a coin 10 times performed inof antimes experiment, then • InThe eachmore case,trials record the number you get Heads the experimental probability will approximately • Place results on the board equal the theoretical probability. Experiment 2 • Roll a die 20 times • In each case, record the number of times you get 5 • Place results on the board Sample Space A sample space is the set of all possible outcomes of an experiment. 4 ways to create a Sample Set: i. List the outcomes {you must use curly brackets} ii. Table of outcomes iii. Draw a 2 Dimensional Grid iv. Draw a Tree Diagram Sample Space Practice List the outcomes for: a) Flipping a coin b) Rolling a single die c) Flipping two coins d) Rolling two dice Sample Space Practice Use a 2D grid to illustrate the sample space for tossing a coin and rolling a die simultaneously. Find the probability of: Rolling a Die Coin Toss 1 2 3 4 5 6 H H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6 T T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 a) tossing heads on the coin b) getting tails and a 5 c) getting tails or a 5 Sample Space Practice Two square spinners, each with 1, 2, 3, and 4 on their edges, are twirled simultaneously. Draw a 2D grid of the possible outcomes. Find the probability of: Spin 2 Spin 1 1 2 3 4 1 (1,1) (1,2) (1,3) (1,4) 2 (2,1) (2,2) (2,3) (2,4) 3 (3,1) (3,2) (3,3) (3,4) 4 (4,1) (4,2) (4,3) (4,4) a) getting a 3 with each spinner b) getting a 3 and a 1 c) getting an even result for each spinner Sample Space Practice: A red and blue dice are rolled together. Calculate the probability that: (a) The total score is 7 (b) The same number comes up on both dice (c) The difference between the scores is 1 (d) The score on the red dice is less than the score on the blue dice (e) The total score is a prime number Roll 2 Roll 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 (1,1) 2 (1,2) 3 (1,3) 4 (1,4) 5 (1,5) 6 (1,6) 7 2 (2,1) 3 (2,2) 4 (2,3) 5 (2,4) 6 (2,5) 7 (2,6) 8 3 (3,1) 4 (3,2) 5 (3,3) 6 (3,4) 7 (3,5) 8 (3,6) 9 4 (4,1) 5 (4,2) 6 (4,3) 7 (4,4) 8 (4,5) 9 (4,6) 10 5 (5,1) 6 (5,2) 7 (5,3) 8 (5,4) 9 (5,5) 10 (5,6) 11 6 (6,1) 7 (6,2) 8 (6,3) 9 (6,4) 10 (6,5) 11 (6,6) 12 Sample Space Practice Draw a table of outcomes to display the possible results when two dice are rolled and the scores are summed. Determine the probability that the sum of the dice is 7. Roll 2 Roll 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Laws of Probability Type Definition Mutually Exclusive events that cannot Events happen at the same time Formula P(A ∩ B) = 0 P(A B) = P(A) + P(B) P(AB) = P(A) + P(B) – P(A∩B) Combined Events (a.k.a. Addition Law) events that can happen at the same time Conditional Probability the probability of an P (A | B) = P (A ∩ B) event A occurring, P (B) given that event B occurred Independent Events occurrence of one event does NOT affect the occurrence of the other P(A ∩ B) = P(A) P(B) Tree Diagrams Consider 3 of 4 In archery, Li has a probability hitting a target and Yuka has a probability of 4 . They both shoot simultaneously. 5 Yuka 4 5 Li 3 4 1 4 H 1 5 4 5 H M H Outcome Probability H and H 3 4 4 5 𝟏𝟐 𝟐𝟎 H and M 3 1 4 5 𝟑 𝟐𝟎 M and H 1 4 4 5 𝟒 𝟐𝟎 M and M 1 1 4 5 M 1 5 M 𝟏 𝟐𝟎 total = 20/20 Tree Diagrams Bike Car 8 10 2 10 6 10 S N 4 10 6 10 4 10 S SS 48 100 N SN 32 100 S NS N NN Tree Diagrams 7 12 Consider a box containing: 3 red, 2 blue, 1 yellow marble With Replacement 9 36 Without Replacement 6 30 What’s the probability of getting two red marbles? Tree Diagrams 9/36 6/36 6/36 + 3/36 + 6/36 + 2/36 + 3/36 + 2/36 = 22/36 3/36 6/36 4/36 2/36 3/36 2/36 1/36 What’s the answer for b? Tree Diagrams 50 56