Class 1
Class 1
= p3
If A, B are independent, then AC and B, A and BC , AC and BC are all independent as well.
Rules to remember:
engines, each of them has probability p of failing, the plane will crash only if the 3 of them
them has probability 0.4% of failure and the plane will crash if either fails. Plane 2 has 3
I am flying from A to B and there are 2 planes I can take. Plane 1 has 2 engines, each of
Quiz 1; Question 1
be of key importance for your Econometrics course later on. You can proove basic results
point of view. Further more, we will start working with conditional probabilities, which will
The first quiz deals all with understanding the concept of probability from a set-theoretic
First Quiz
(e)
Pr(Plane 1 crashes)
::::::::::::
This should make sense, try to verify using diagrams. If the pairwise intersection is empty,
check out each option. This makes it difficult! But lets go have a look.
I believe this is the toughest question on this problem set, mainly because you have to
Question 2
:::
Pr(Plane 2 crashes)
:::::::::::: ::::::::::::
1 Pr(A B C D)
This is a contradiction.
BUT
= 0.6 Pr(D A)
0.6
Pr(A)
= 1 0.65 = 0.35
Pr(D A)
r
3r + 0
p
3r
=
(1 p)
p
Pr(E |Ej )
Pr(E Ej )
:::::::::::::::::::::::::
Pr(Ej ) =
(e)
P[E1 E3 ] = P[E2 E3 ] = r, and P[E1 E2 E3 ] = 0. What is the probability that at least one
If E1, E2 and E3 are events such that P[E1 |E2 ] = P[E2 |E3 ] = P[E3 |E1 ] = p; P[E1 E2 ] =
Question 3
Pr(D A) = 0.05
+ Pr(D A) = 0.4
BUT Pr(D A)
= Pr(D) + Pr(A)
Pr(D A)
= 0.65
Pr(D A)
= 0.55.
(d) Pr(D A)
1
4
and 1?
(1)3
(1/ 4)3
FALSE
FALSE
(b)
FY (1) FY (1/ 4)
FY (1/ 2) FY (1/ 4)
< Pr(A)
Pr(B)
Pr(B|A) < Pr(B)
TRUE
Pr(A|B) =
< Pr(A)
Pr(B)
Pr(A B) < Pr(A)Pr(B) < Pr(A)
Pr(A|B) =
Pr(A B)
:::::::::::::::::::::::::
:::::::::::::::::::::::::
:::::::::::::::::::::::::
FY (1) = k/ 3 = 1 k = 3
Question 5
1
2
(LM) Suppose that Y (y) = ky 2 ; 0 y 1. What is the probability that Y is between 0 and
Question 4
Pr(Fair|Pear wins) =
(0.6)(0.5) + (0.9)(0.5)
(0.6)(0.5)
= 40%
(d)
fair election was 50%. Today, I read in the Guardian that Ms. Pear did win the election. My
of winning the election jump up to 90%. Initially, I thought that the probability of having a
60% of probability of winning the election. If the elections are not fair, however, her odds
An election is to be held in Banaland. If the elections are fair, the incumbent, Ms. Pear, has
Question 6
= 0.2
1 0.65
(d)
Note: it may not be entirely clear, but such a penality shoot-out can go forever. Hence,
world cup?
tied after each team has its 5 opportunities, what is the probability that Brazil will win the
is 0.8 and the probability that an Italian player scores is 0.75. If the penalty shoot-out is
we have it over. Assume that the probability that a Brazilian player scores a penalty shot
for each team. If after the 5 shots of each team there is tie, each team shoots once until
award in the world of sports in that year. A penalty shoot-out starts with 5 opportunities
00. A penalty shoot-out between Brazil and Italy will define who gets the most important
It is the final game of the World Cup, 1994. The match was pretty boring and ended up tied,
Question 7
365
364
(365)22 343!
365!
365
365
(d)
365
363
365
344
different from the first player. The third term is the probability of player 3 being born on a
first player. This probability is 364/365, because that is the chance of being born on a day
term is the probability that the second player has the birthday not in common with the
with none of the previously analyzed players (because there have been none). The second
The first term corresponds to the probability that the first player has no birthday in common
= 1
= 1
there are 21 chances. Comparing all individuals with each other, not counting chances
!22
twice means there are in total 231 chances - 2 .
If we have 22 players, the first player can compare his birthday with 21 other players. So
people. This is due to the assumption that each day out of the year is equally likely to be
"at least 2 share a birthday" approaches 100 percent as the number of individuals con-
This is known as the so-called Birthday-problem in statistics. The probability of the event
day?
What is the probability that at least 2 out of the 22 players have their birthday in the same
Question 8
Pr(A)
Pr(Bj A)
Pr(A)
Pr(A|Bj )Pr(Bj )
B = S and B Bj =
=1
n
[
j 6=
1 (1 p) + 0.5 (p)
1 (1 p)
1 0.5p
1p
Pr(fraternal set|twins) = p
set is p and an identical set is q = 1 p. If the next set of twins are of the same sex, what
have a 50-50 chance of being the same sex. Among twins, the probability of a fraternal
Identical twins come from the same egg and hence are of the same sex. Fraternal twins
Pr(A|Bj )Pr(Bj )
= Pn
Pr(A|B )Pr(B )
=1
Pr(Bj |A) =
So: Pr(exactly one event) = Pr(A) Pr(A B) + Pr(B) Pr(A B) = Pr(A) + Pr(B) 2Pr(A B)
simpler:
Let events A and B be independent. Find the probability, in terms of Pr(A) and Pr(B) that