1 / 35

Probability 4/18/12

Probability 4/18/12. Probability Conditional probability Disjoint events Independent events. Section 11.1 ( pdf ). Professor Kari Lock Morgan Duke University. To Do. Project 2 Presentation (TOMORROW)

armen
Download Presentation

Probability 4/18/12

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Probability • 4/18/12 • Probability • Conditional probability • Disjoint events • Independent events Section 11.1 (pdf) Professor Kari Lock Morgan Duke University

  2. To Do • Project 2 Presentation (TOMORROW) • Read The Bayesian Heresy, fromThe Lady Tasting Tea: How Statistics Revolutionized Science in the Twentieth Century • Homework 10 (due Monday, 4/23) • Project 2 Paper (Wednesday, 4/25)

  3. Presentations • Each group will get 10 minutes to present, and this will be strictly enforced. Plan on 8 minutes of presentation, 2 minutes for questions. • No need to present your whole project – choose only whatever is most interesting • Make sure to upload your presentation slides to Sakai by 8:30 am tomorrow (name: team name) • Presentation order will be randomly determined and we will start on time, so make sure to be there on time • Reminder: all group members must participate! Not participating will result in an individual 0 for the presentation component.

  4. Office Hours Today • 3-5 pm (Professor Morgan - Old Chem 216) • 7-9 pm (Michael - Old Chem 211A)

  5. PROBABILITY

  6. Event • An event is something that either happens or doesn’t happen, or something that either is true or is not true • Examples: • Y = 1 • Y > 90 • Gender = male • It rains today • The Bruins win the Stanley Cup again

  7. Probability • The probabilityof event A, P(A), is the probability that A will happen • Probability is always between 0 and 1 • Probability always refers to an event • P(A) = 1 means A will definitely happen • P(A) = 0 means A will definitely not happen

  8. Probability Examples • Y = number of siblings. P(Y = 1) = 0.481 • (based on your survey data) • Y: final grade in STAT 101. P(Y > 90) = 0.338 • (based on last semester’s class) • P(Gender = male) = 0.506 • (for Duke students, www.usnews.com) • P(it rains today) = 0.7 • (www.weather.com) • P(The Bruins win the Stanley Cup again) = 1/6 (www.bleacherreport.com)

  9. Sexual Orientation • What are the sexual orientation demographics of American adults? • We need data! • Data collected in 2009 on a random sample of American adults (National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior)

  10. Sexual Orientation Herbenick D, Reece M, Schick V, Sanders SA, Dodge B, and Fortenberry JD (2010). Sexual behavior in the United States: Results from a national probability sample of men and women ages 14–94. Journal of Sexual Medicine;7(suppl 5):255–265.

  11. Sexual Orientation What is the probability that an American adult is homosexual? 128/5042 = 0.025 128/4673 = 0.027 105/2521 = 0.04 I got a different answer

  12. Two Events • P(A and B)is the probability that both events A and B will happen • P(A or B) is the probability that either event A or event B will happen

  13. Two Events A or B: all color B A and B A

  14. Sexual Orientation What is the probability that an American adult is male and homosexual? 105/128 = 0.82 105/2521 = 0.04 105/5042 = 0.021 I got a different answer

  15. Sexual Orientation What is the probability that an American adult is female or bisexual? 2679/5042 = 0.531 2587/5042 = 0.513 92/2521 = 0.036 I got a different answer

  16. P(A or B) B A

  17. Sexual Orientation What is the probability that an American adult is not heterosexual? 369/5042 = 0.073 2587/5042 = 0.513 92/2521 = 0.036 I got a different answer

  18. P(not A)

  19. Caffeine • Based on last year’s survey data, 52% of students drink caffeine in the morning, 48% of students drink caffeine in the afternoon, and 37% drink caffeine in the morning and the afternoon. What percent of students do not drink caffeine in the morning or the afternoon? • 63% • 37% • 100% • 50%

  20. Conditional Probability • P(A if B)is the probability of A, if we know B has happened • This is read in multiple ways: • “probability of A if B” • “probability of A given B” • “probability of A conditional on B” • You may also see this written as P(A | B)

  21. Sexual Orientation What is the probability that an American adult male is homosexual? 105/128 = 0.82 105/2521 = 0.04 105/5042 = 0.021 I got a different answer

  22. Sexual Orientation What is the probability that an American adult homosexual is male? 105/128 = 0.82 105/2521 = 0.04 105/5042 = 0.021 I got a different answer

  23. Conditional Probability P(homosexual if male) = 0.04 P(male if homosexual) = 0.82

  24. Conditional Probability B A

  25. Caffeine Based on last year’s survey data, 52% of students drink caffeine in the morning, 48% of students drink caffeine in the afternoon, and 37% drink caffeine in the morning and the afternoon. What percent of students who drink caffeine in the morning also drink caffeine in the afternoon? 77% 37% 71%

  26. Helpful Tip If the table problems are easier for your than the sentence problems, try to first convert what you know into a table. 52% of students drink caffeine in the morning, 48% of students drink caffeine in the afternoon, and 37% drink caffeine in the morning and the afternoon 37 15 52 37 11 48 52 100 48 P( afternoon if morning) = 37/52 = 0.71

  27. P(A and B)

  28. Duke Rank and Experience 60% of STAT 101 students rank their Duke experience as “Excellent,” and Duke was the first choice school for 59% of those who ranked their Duke experience as excellent. What percentage of STAT 101 students had Duke as a first choice and rank their experience here as excellent? 60% 59% 35% 41%

  29. Summary

  30. Disjoint Events • Events A and B are disjoint or mutually exclusiveif only one of the two events can happen • Think of two events that are disjoint, and two events that are not disjoint.

  31. Disjoint Events If A and B are disjoint, then P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) P(A and B) = P(A)P(B)

  32. P(A or B) B B A A

  33. Independence • Events A and B are independent if P(A if B) = P(A). • Intuitively, knowing that event B happened does not change the probability that event A happened. • Think of two events that are independent, and two events that are not independent.

  34. Independent Events If A and B are independent, then P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) P(A and B) = P(A)P(B)

  35. P(A and B)

More Related