Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
64 lines (42 loc) · 2.16 KB

File metadata and controls

64 lines (42 loc) · 2.16 KB

1. Suppose you flip a coin twice and observe the result. Which set below describes the sample space of this experiment? I.e., which set describes every possible outcome?

Define: $H$ as heads and $T$ as tails.

  • $\lbrace H, T \rbrace$
  • $\lbrace ( H, T ), ( T, H ) \rbrace$
  • $\lbrace ( H, H ), ( T, T ) \rbrace$
  • $\lbrace ( H, T ), ( H, H ), ( T, H ), ( T, T ) \rbrace$

2. Let's keep the same experiment: flipping a coin twice. What is the probability of obtaining one head and one tail in this experiment (the order doesn't matter)?

  • (A)

$$\frac{1}{2}$$

  • (B)

$$\frac{1}{4}$$

  • (C)

$$\frac{3}{4}$$

3. Consider the following experiment:

You throw a dice $10$ times and sum the results. What is the probability of getting a number higher than $10$?

Hint: Use the complement rule!

  • (A)

$$\frac{1}{6^{10}}$$

  • (B)

$$\frac{5}{6}$$

  • (C)

$$\frac{1}{6}$$

  • (D)

$$\frac{6^{10}-1}{6^{10}}$$

4. If you throw a dice twice and sum the result, what is the probability of getting a $10$?

  • (A)

$$\frac{1}{12}$$

  • (B)

$$\frac{1}{9}$$

  • (C)

$$\frac{1}{36}$$

  • (D)

$$\frac{1}{18}$$

5. Consider the following problem:

In an experiment there are 100 ill persons. 50 of them have headache and 50 of them have fever.

The researchers want to find the probability of a random selected person in this experiment having headache or fever. One researcher provides the following argument:

"Since 50 out of 100 have headache, the probability of having headache is 1/2. The same reasoning can be applied to having fever. Therefore, the probability that a random selected person has either fever or headache is 1."

About their argument, choose the correct option.

  • It is incorrect, because it assumes that the events of having headache and fever are disjoint. This cannot be inferred by the experiment as it is stated.
  • It is correct, because in this case it is an application of the sum of probabilities.
  • It is incorrect, because instead of summing up the probabilities, the researcher should have multiplied it.
  • It is correct, because the sum of persons with headache and with fever is exactly 100.