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Name___________________________ I certify by signing that I have neither given, received, nor witnessed any unauthorized assistance on this exam. Exam 2---Math 2210---Fall 2013 Directions: Follow all directions. Show all work where necessary (excluding computations done exclusively on the calculator) neatly in detail to ensure proper credit. Problems with no work where work is indicated may receive no credit. 1. Suppose you must take two exams today. First, you’ll take a Stats exam with Dr. Smith, then you’ll take a Philosophy exam with Dr. Weiss. If you get an A on Smith’s exam, this might be a sign that you did a good job preparing for your exams, and there is a 80% probability you’ll get an A on Weiss’ exam. If you don’t get an A on Smith’s exam, then maybe you didn’t prepare so well and there will be only a 10% chance that you’ll get an A on Weiss’ exam. You think initially there is a 40% chance you’ll get an A on Smith’s exam. Dr. Weiss actually hands back his exam first, and you find that you got an A on Weiss’ exam. Use Bayes’ Rule to find the probability P(S|W) that you got an A on Smith’s exam given that you know you got an A on Weiss’ exam. 2. Answer each question by underlining the appropriate answer. In parts a and b, determine if the random variable under consideration is discrete or continuous. a. Let X = the number of heads obtained when tossing a coin 75 times. CONTINUOUS DISCRETE b. Let X = the total time in minutes it takes you to complete problem 6 on this exam. CONTINUOUS DISCRETE In parts c and d, determine whether or not the random variable in question has a binomial distribution. c. An officer from public safety sees 100 cars in the Allgood parking lot. The officer proceeds to run the plate number of each car and sees how many outstanding parking tickets are assigned to each car. BINOMIAL NOT BINOMIAL d. An officer from public safety sees 100 cars in the Allgood parking lot. The officer proceeds to inspect each car and see if it has a valid parking tag, and then tallies up the number of cars without a valid tag. BINOMIAL NOT BINOMIAL 3. You believe the vending machine in Allgood Hall will eat (accept but not credit or refund) any given dollar bill you try to use with probability 1.5%. Over the course of one year, you try to use 100 dollars in the machine. Assume each bill used is independent. a. If X = the mean number of your dollars eaten by the machine, what is the mean and standard deviation of the random variable X? b. Find the probability the machine eats 6 or more of your dollars. c. Suppose you do in fact try to use 100 dollars in the machine over the course of the academic year, and the machine eats 6 of them. Which of the following would you conclude? Underline your answer of choice. Assuming the machine eats 1.5% of the bills you try to use, seeing the machine eat 6 or more of 100 bills is not particularly out of the ordinary. You might suspect that perhaps the machine is in fact eating more than 1.5% of the bills used. 4. According to the Augusta Chronicle, there were 32 homicides in Richmond County during 2012. Assuming the times between each homicide are independent of one another, the number of homicides per unit time should follow a Poisson distribution. a. Find the probability there would be at least one (i.e. one or more) homicides on any given day in Richmond County. b. Find the probability there would be exactly one homicide during a given five-day period. 5. You believe that if you attempt to park your car on campus without displaying a parking tag, there is a 70% probability you will be ticketed by Public Safety. a. If you park your car on campus 10 times without a tag, find the probability you’ll get ticketed all 10 times. Assume independence. b. Find the probability you get ticketed exactly 5 times. 6. In Denmark, it is estimated that a given person will eventually develop brain cancer with probability .000340. In a study of 420,095 cell phone users in Denmark, it was found that 135 of them developed brain cancer. a. Let X = the number of people in a sample of size 420,095 who eventually develop brain cancer. Find the mean and standard deviation of X. b. Find the probability that 135 or more people in a sample of this size would have eventually developed brain cancer. 7. The lengths of pregnancies (which end with live births) in humans are normally distributed with mean 268 days and standard deviation 15 days. a. Find the probability a human pregnancy would last 308 or more days. b. Suppose any pregnancy whose duration is in the bottom 4% of the distribution is deemed premature (as the child born might need special care in such a scenario). What pregnancy length (or shorter!) would be classified as premature? 8. Suppose that when you are exposed to a certain contagious disease (say the common cold, being in close proximity to a person when they sneeze), there is a 3% probability that you will become infected with the disease. a. If you are exposed to the disease X times, write a formula for the probability that you get infected at least once (i.e. one or more times). b. Hopefully using the calculator, what is the minimum number of times must you be exposed to have a 90% probability of getting infected (one or more times)? You can save yourself some needless screen-scrolling if you pick a judicious starting value.