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General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint)...

Date post: 02-Jan-2016
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Page 1: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.
Page 2: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

General Probability Rules…

If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just:

( ) ( ) ( )P A B P A P B

( ) ( ) ( )P A B P A P B

( ) ( ) ( ) ( )P A B C P A P B P C

We can extend the rule

Page 3: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Probability Rules

If events A and B are independent of each other (but not disjoint) then the probability of A and B happeningA and B happening is just:

( ) ( ) ( )P A B P A P B

Page 4: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Probability Rules

If events A and B are independent of each other (but not disjoint) then the probability of A or B happeningA or B happening is just:

( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )P A B P A P B P A P B

Hmmm – why is this “less” than the disjoint case?

Page 5: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Examples…

4.86 4.89 4.94

Page 6: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Conditional Probability

Sometimes, knowledge of an event alters the probability of a future event. Example 4.30 illustrates this.

We write this as P(B|A), which represents the probability of B the probability of B happening given the occurrence of Ahappening given the occurrence of A

Page 7: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Multiplication rules …

( ) ( ) ( | )

( )( | )

( )

P A and B P A P B A

P A and BP B A

P A

Page 8: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Examples…

4.1014.103

Page 9: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Tree Diagrams…

These are useful when there are a large number of probabilities to consider

Example: 38% of people earn a post secondary degree. What is the probability of selecting a person at random from a large crowd so that the person is either female and has a PhD or male with no post secondary degree? Use the data from 4.94 and assume 50% of the general population is male.

Page 10: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Plan of attack:

•Lay out all stems and branches

•Assign probabilities

•Calculate!

Page 11: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

Decision Analysis…

This is a very useful application of stats!Applications:

Medicine course of treatment (example 4.37) Computing Science “fuzzy logic” and AI Engineering/Business production choices

Page 12: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

What’s the best option?

Page 13: General Probability Rules… If events A and B are completely independent of each other (disjoint) then the probability of A or B happening is just: We.

In conclusion…

Make sure you understand what is meant by conditional probability

Learn how to use (rather than memorize!) the probability formulae

Ignore the sections on Baye’s RuleTry 4.91, 4.92,4.97


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