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Chapter 4 Notes - Probability

The document discusses basic probability concepts including types of probability, properties of probability, and probability rules. It provides examples of calculating probabilities using addition and multiplication rules for dependent and independent events. Counting rules for permutations and combinations are also introduced.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
7 views

Chapter 4 Notes - Probability

The document discusses basic probability concepts including types of probability, properties of probability, and probability rules. It provides examples of calculating probabilities using addition and multiplication rules for dependent and independent events. Counting rules for permutations and combinations are also introduced.

Uploaded by

tshepoharvey0
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Statistics

Chapter 4: Basic Probability Concepts

Many business decisions are made under conditions of uncertainty. Probability theory
provides the foundation for quantifying and measuring uncertainty.

A probability is the chance, or likelihood, that a particular event will occur.

E.g. probability-type questions:


• What is the probability/chance that it will rain today?
• What is the likelihood that a task will be completed within 45 minutes?
• How likely is it that a product will fail within its guarantee period?

1. TYPES OF PROBABILITY
⇒ 2 Types of probability:
1. Subjective probability – cannot be statistically verified and is not used much for
statistical analysis
2. Objective probability – when probability of an event occurring can be verified
statistically through surveys or empirical observations; used extensively.

r
Any probability is defined as: P(A) =
n

Where: A = event of a specific type (or with specific properties)


r = number of outcomes of event A
n = total number of all possible outcomes (sample space)
P(A) = probability of event A occurring

E.g. Assume 355 Ford car owners (n = 355) were randomly selected and asked: ‘When
you buy your next car, will you buy another Ford product?’ (event A). 76 respondents
said ‘yes’. (r = 76)
76
Then: P(A) = = 0.214 (21.4%)
355

⇒ 3 ways in which objective probabilities can be derived:


1. a priori
2. empirically
3. mathematically

2. PROPERTIES OF A PROBABILITY
There are 5 basic properties that apply to every probability:
1. a probability value lies only between 0 and 1 inclusive (0 ≤ P(A) ≤ 1)
2. if an even cannot occur: P(A) = 0
3. if an event is certain to occur: P(A) = 1
4. the sum of probabilities of all possible events (collectively exhaustive set of
events) = 1 [P(A1) + P(A2) + . . . P(Ak) = 1] for k number of events
5. Complementary probability: If P(A) is the probability of event A occurring, then
the probability of event A not occurring, is: P(Ā ) = 1 – P(A)

3. BASIC PROBABILITY CONCEPTS


170 companies from JSE were randomly selected and classified by sector and size. The
following cross-tabulation table of joint frequencies for two categorical random
variables ‘sector’ and ‘company size’ are given.
1
Sector Company size Row Total
Small Medium Large
Mining 3 8 30 41
Financial 9 21 42 72
Service 10 6 8 24
Retail 14 13 6 33
Column Total 36 48 86 170

⇒ Look at examples for concepts, p.110-113


Concept 1: Intersection of two events (A ∩ B)
⇒ set of all outcomes that belong to both A and B simultaneously. Keyword is ‘and’

Concept 2: Union of two events (A ∪ B)


⇒ set of all outcomes that belong to either event A or B or both. Keyword is ‘or’

Concept 3: Mutually exclusive events


⇒ events are mutually exclusive if they cannot occur together on a single trial of a
random experiment

Concept 4: Collectively exhaustive events


⇒ union of all possible events is equal to the sample space; probability = 1

Concept 5: Statistically independent events


⇒ two events, A and B, are statistically independent if the occurrence of event A has no
effect on the outcome of event B, and vice versa

4. CALCULATING OBJECTIVE PROBABILITIES


⇒ Look at examples p. 113-115

Marginal probabilities P(A)


⇒ probability of a single event A occurring only → P(A)

Joint probability P(A ∩ B)


⇒ probability that both event A and B will occur simultaneously on a single trial of a
random experiment

Conditional probability (PA/B)


⇒ probability of event A occurring, given that event B has already occurred

P ( A ∩B)
P(A/B) =
P( B)
5. PROBABILITY RULES
⇒ to calculate probabilities of compound or multiple events:
• The addition rule
- for mutually exclusive events
- for non-mutually exclusive events
• The multiplication rule
- for statistically dependent events
- for statistically independent events

2
170 companies from JSE were randomly selected and classified by sector and size. The
following cross-tabulation table of joint frequencies for two categorical random
variables ‘sector’ and ‘company size’ are given.

Sector Company size Row Total


Small Medium Large
Mining 3 8 30 41
Financial 9 21 42 72
Service 10 6 8 24
Retail 14 13 6 33
Column Total 36 48 86 170

Addition rule for mutually exclusive events


⋇ What is the probability that a randomly selected JSE-listed company is either a mining
company or a service company?

41
⇒ let A = event (mining company) =
170
24
⇒ let B = event (service company) =
170

⟡Note that the keyword here is ‘or’ – meaning that addition rule will be applicable
⟡Find whether events A and B are mutually exclusive or not (can occur simultaneously
or not); in this case: no, they cannot occur simultaneously (they are mutually
exclusive)

Use formula:
P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B)

41 24 65
P(Mining ∪ Service) = + = = 0.38 (38%)
170 170 170

Addition rule for non-mutually exclusive events


⋇ What is the probability that a randomly selected JSE-listed company is either a large
company or a financial company, or both?

86
⇒ let A = event (large company) =
170
72
⇒ let B = event (financial company) =
170

⟡Note that the keyword here is ‘or’ – meaning that addition rule will be applicable
⟡Find whether events A and B are mutually exclusive or not (can occur simultaneously
or not); in this case: yes, they can occur simultaneously (they are non-mutually
exclusive); large and financial can cross in the table
Use formula:
P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) – P(A ∩ B)

3
42
P(A ∩ B) is where both events (large and financial) occur/cross in table =
170

86 72 42 116
P(Large ∪ Financial) = + – = = 0.68 (68%)
170 170 170 170

Multiplication rule for statistically dependent events


⇒ used to find joint probability of events A and B

P(A ∩ B) = P(A/B) ⨯ P(B)

⋇ What is the probability of selecting a small retail company?

⇒ let A = event (small company)


⇒ let B = event (retail company)

⟡ the keyword here is ‘and’


⟡ the probability is where the two events cross in the table
⟡ not necessary to do all the steps for formula (see example p.119)

14
P(Small ∩ Retail) = = 0.082 (8.2%)
170

Multiplication rule for statistically independent events


⇒ if two events A and B are statistically independent (i.e. there is no association
between the two events) then the multiplication rule reduces to the product of
the two marginal probabilities only:
P(A∩B) = P(A) × P(B)

Not applicable on cross-tabulation table (see p. 119)

Example of conditional probability


⋇ What is the probability that a randomly selected company is a retail company, given
that it is known (in advance) to be a medium-sized company?

⇒ let A = event (retail company)


⇒ let B = event (medium company)
Use formula:
P ( A ∩B)
P(A/B) =
P( B)

13
P ( Retail ∩ Medium) 170 13
P(Retail/Medium) = = = = 0.271
P(Medium) 48 48
170
(27.1%)

6. COUNTING RULES – PERMUTATIONS & COMBINATIONS


⇒ 3 basic counting rules:

4
• Multiplication rule of counting
- For single event: total number of different ways in which n objects can be
arranged, is given by n!.
e.g. In a 6-lane swimming pool, how many unique arrangements of 6 swimmers
can be considered?
Answer: 6! = 6 ⨯ 5 ⨯ 4 ⨯ 3 ⨯ 2 ⨯ 1 = 720
- For combined events: particular random process has n1 possible outcomes for
event 1, n2 possible outcomes for event 2, . . . nj possible outcomes for event j,
then the total number of possible outcomes for j events collectively is:
n1 ⨯ n2 ⨯ n3 . . . ⨯ nj
e.g. A restaurant menu has a choice of 4 starters, 10 main courses and 6 desserts.
What is the total number of possible unique meals that can be ordered?
Answer: n1 = 4; n2 = 10; n3 = 6, thus 4 ⨯ 10 ⨯ 6 = 240 possible meals

• Permutation rule
⇒ a permutation is the number of distinct ways of selecting (or arranging) a subset of r
objects drawn from a larger group of n objects, where the order of selection of objects
is important
n!
nPr =
( n−r ) !
Where: r = number of objects selected at a time
n = total number of objects from which to select
- E.g. A factory has 3 machines and 8 possible machine operators. How many
distinct assignments (orderings) of machine operators are possible?
- Answer: r = 3; n = 8
8!
8P3 = = 336 permutations
( 8−3 ) !

• Combinations rule
⇒ a combination is the number of distinct ways of selecting (or arranging) a subset of
r objects drawn from a larger group of n objects where the order of selection of
objects is not important
n!
nCr =
r ! ( n−r ) !

- E.g. A company produces fruit juice in 10 different flavours. A local supermarket


sells the product, but has only sufficient shelf space to display 3 of the 10 fruit
juice flavours at a time. How many possible groupings (combinations) of 3
flavours can the fruit juice company display on the shelf?
- Answer: r = 3; n = 10; order in which the 3 juice flavours are displayed, is not
10 !
important 10C3 = = 120 combinations
3! (10−3 ) !

_________________________________________________________________________

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