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Midterm 2 Practice, Part C The following problems have been given at ¯nal exams of previous years or they are practice problems that we wrote and are are relatively close to questions you may see at the exam. Recall that the ¯nal exam will also contain material that was covered in Midterm 1 and Midterm 2. Spend some time with the midterm practice sets as well. We have also included few problems that correspond to material of Midterm 1 and Midterm 2. Problem 1 This is a multiple choice question. In each part there are three choices, 1, 2 or 3. You must circle the number corresponding to the best choice in each case. Points are awarded like this: ² A correct answer on any part is worth four points, ² Leaving it blank gets you zero points, but ² For a wrong answer, 2 points will be deducted, meaning there is a penalty for guessing. (1) (2) The recurrence an = 2 + an¡1 (n ¸ 1) with a0 = 2 speci¯es the same sequence with the explicit formula 1. an = 2n for n ¸ 0 2. an = 2(n + 1) for n ¸ 0 3. both of the above Suppose A; B are events such that P (A \ B) = 0:2 and P (B) = 0:8. Then P (AjB) 1. is 0:25 2. is 0:16 3. cannot be determined from the given information Problem 2 1. P (AjB) = (a) P (A) + P (B) ¡ P (A \ B) (b) P (A) ¡ P (B) + P (A \ B) (c) P (A \ B)=P (B) 2. P (A1 \ A2 \ A3 ) = : : : (a) P (A1 jA2 \ A3 )P (A2 jA3 )P (A3 ) (b) P (A1 )P (A2 )P (A3 ) 1 (c) none of the above 3. The random variable X follows the normal distribution Á¹;¾ . Which of the following hold? (a) P (X > ¹) = 1 2 (b) P (X > ¹jX > ¡¹) = 1 4 (c) both of the above 4. We toss a fair coin 100 times. The probability to get heads 50 times is (a) 50=100 (100) (b) 25050 (c) none of the above Problem 3 Consider two boxes A and B ¯lled with red and blue balls. Box A has 8 red and 16 blue balls. Box B has 6 red and 12 blue balls. First you choose one of the two boxes. Box A has probability 0.4 to be chosen and box B has probability 0.6 to be chosen. Let us assume that you choose at random 6 balls out of the chosen box, sampling without replacement. What is the probability that you have picked 4 red and 2 blue balls? Given that you have picked 4 red and 2 blue balls, what is the probability that you picked them from box A? Again, you pick 6 balls from the chosen box. But now if the red balls are more than the blue balls then you pick one more ball from the other box. Let us call B the random variable that represents the total number of blue balls that you end up with. Compute its probability distribution. Problem 4 Suppose a sequence satis¯es the given recurrence relation and initial conditions. Find an explicit formula for each sequence. 1. an = ak¡1 + 2ak¡2 a0 = 6; a1 = 3 2. bn = 6bk¡1 ¡ 9bk¡2 b0 = 0; b1 = 3 Problem 5 A sequence is de¯ned recursively as follows: vk = 2vk¡2 ; 8k ¸ 2; v0 = 1; v1 = 2 1. Use iteration to guess an explicit closed formula (a function of n) for the sequence. 2 2. Use induction to prove that the formula in part (a) holds for all n. Problem 6 Suppose you have 2 coins in your pocket, one fair coin (equal chance of H or T) and one fake coin with 23 chance of H and 13 chance of T. Suppose you randomly pick one coin from your pocket. 1. What is the probability the coin is fair and when you °ip it you get tails. 2. What is the probability the coin is fake and when you °ip it you get heads. 3. Suppose you °ip the coin and heads comes up, what is the probability the coin you °ipped is the fair one? The fake one? Problem 7 Box A contains 6 balls of which 1 is defective and box B contains 7 balls of which 3 are defective. A ball is drawn at random from each box. If one ball is defective and one is not, what is the probability that the defective one came from box A? Problem 8 CSE999 is taken by both CSE, Physics, and Math majors. The grade Xc of a random CSE major follows the normal distribution Á¹c ;¾ . The grade Xp of a random Physics major follows the normal distribution Á¹p ;¾ and the grade of a random Math major is Á¹m ;¾ . 40 CSE students, 20 Math Students and 20 Physics students take the class. Finally, assume that ¹p < ¹c < ¹m and in addition it is ¹c = ¹p + ² and ¹m = ¹c + ². Assume that ¹c = 50, ¹p = 40, ¹m = 60, and ¾ = 10. With the help of the attached standard normal curve area table ¯nd the following: 1. The probability P (Xc > 45). 2. The probability P (Xp > 45). 3. The probability P (Xm < 55). 4. The probability P (Xc < 55). 5. The probability P (45 < Xc < 55). 6. The probability P (45 < Xm < 55). 7. Find the probability that the grade of a random student is greater than ¹c . Do not use the speci¯c numbers for ¹c , ¹p , ¹m and ¾. Problem 9 A family has 6 children. 1. Assuming that each kid may be a boy with probability family has exactly 3 boys. 1 2 what is the probability that the 2. It turns out that according to recent detailed statistics the probability of a kid being a boy is 0:498. What is the probability that the family has exactly 3 boys? Problem 10 There are two boxes, A and B. The ¯rst box contains 7 blue and 3 yellow marbles. The second box contains 5 blue and 5 yellow marbles. 4 marbles are selected randomly from a random box. 3 1. What is the probability that 3 blue and 1 yellow marble are selected? 2. Assuming that 3 blue and 1 yellow marble are selected, what is the probability that the box A was selected. Problem 11 Assume that you have an in¯nitly large set of blocks of heights 1 and 2 inches. Imagine constructing towers by piling blocks of di®erent heights directly on top of one another. For example, a tower of height 6 inches could be obtained using any of the following sequences: ² Six 1-inch blocks. This sequence is represented as [1; 1; 1; 1; 1; 1]. ² Three 2-inch blocks. This sequence is represented as [2; 2; 2]. ² One 1-inch block, stacked on top of one 2-inch block, stacked on top of one 1-inch block, stacked on top of one 2-inch block. This sequence is represented as [2; 1; 2; 1]. Note that the sequence [1; 2; 1; 2] is di®erent from the sequence [2; 1; 2; 1] or the sequence [1; 1; 2; 2]. That is, the order is important. ² etc... Let tn be the number of ways to construct a tower of height n inches using blocks from the set. 1. Find a recurrence relation for tn . 2. Solve the recurrence relation tn , i.e., derive an explicit formula for tn . 4