01 Probability Flashcards

1
Q

You __(v.)__ a coin (2 answers)

A

Toss; flip

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2
Q

♡♧♢♤ are the four __(n.)__ in a pack of __(n.)__

A

Suits in a pack of playing cards

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3
Q

The King, Queen, and Jack in a pack of cards are called the __(n.)__ cards

A

Face cards

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4
Q

⚂ is a __(n.)__

A

a die

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5
Q

⚂⚄ are __(n., pl.)__

A

dice (not dies)

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6
Q

You __(v.)__ a die

A

roll or throw

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7
Q

Random means…

A
  • each individual outcome is unpredictable or uncertain
  • there is a pattern over many repetitions
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8
Q

What is an experiment?

A

Any phenomenon with random results

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9
Q

What is the sample space, S, of an experiment?

A

The set of all possible outcomes

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10
Q

What is an event?

A

A subset of the sample space; a set of one or more possible outcomes

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11
Q

If A is an event, what is P(A)?

A

The probability of the event A occurring

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12
Q

What is the definition of the probability of an outcome?

A

The long-term relative frequency of the outcome; the proportion of times the outcome would occur in a long series of repetitions

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13
Q

What is the definition of experimental probability?

A

P(A) = the number of times the desired outcome occurs / the total number of trials

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14
Q

What is a trial?

A

A repetition of a phenomenon with random results.

For example, each roll of a die is a trial

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15
Q

What is a distribution?

A

The pattern of frequencies of the different possible outcomes to a random phenomenon

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16
Q

What is theoretical probability?

A

If there are k individual outcomes to an event, and each is equally likely, then the theoretical probability of each outcome is 1/k.

17
Q

What is a fair/unbiased coin/die?

A

One in which each possible outcome is equally likely

18
Q

A probability model consists of two parts; what are they?

A
  • A sample space, S
  • a means of assigning probabilities to events
19
Q

What are the four suits in a pack of playing cards called?

A
  • ♡ Hearts
  • ♧ Clubs
  • ♢ Diamonds
  • ♤ Spades
20
Q

What does it mean if events or trials are independent?

A

The outcome of one event or trial does not affect the outcome of any other event or trial.

21
Q

What does it mean to say that two events are mutually exclusive or disjoint?

A

They cannot occur together;

eg “passing the exam” and “failing the exam” are disjoint events - it is not possible to both pass and fail the exam.

22
Q

What does {A∪B} mean?

A

“A union B” is the set of all outcomes which are in either A or B (or both).

23
Q

What does {A∩B} mean?

A

“A intersect B” is the set of all outcomes that are both A and B.

24
Q

If A and B are mutually exclusive or disjoint, then we can say something about either {A∪B} or {A∩B}; what?

A

{A∩B} = ∅, or A intersect B is empty.

25
Q

What is the General Addition Rule for P(A or B)?

A

P(A or B) = P(A∪B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A∩B)

26
Q

What is the multiplication rule for P(A or B) and when is it valid?

A

P(A or B) = P(A∩B) = P(A)⋅P(B),

if A and B are independent events.

27
Q

What is conditional probability?

A

The situation where the probability of a second event is dependent on the outcome of a first event.

For example, the probability of the event “snow falls on a day” depends on the outcome of the event “the day is in winter.”

28
Q

Conditional probability is defined as P(B|A) =…?

A

The probability of B given A,
P(B|A) = P(A∩B)/P(A).

29
Q

If A and B are independent events, what can we say about them?

A

P(B|A) = P(B); the conditional probability of B given A is the same as the probability of B
also
P(A∩B) = P(A)⋅P(B)

30
Q

How many different groups of size r can you make from n objects? (the order of the objects is not important)

A
  • “n choose r” = nCr = n! / r!(n-r)!
  • each of these groups is called a combination
31
Q

How many different groups of size r can you make from n objects if the order of the objects is important?

A
  • nPr = n! / (n-r)!
  • each of these groups is called a permutation
32
Q

What tool can you use to help you calculate probabilities in a complex situation?

A

A tree diagram

33
Q

What is Benford’s law?

A

The distribution of the first digits of numbers in accounting records - the 9 possible first digits do not have equal probability of occurring; 1 is the most common first digit, then 2, then 3…

34
Q

What are the 5 key facts to remember about probability?

A
  • P(A) = number of desired outcomes / total number of trials
  • independent events are events whose outcomes do not affect each other
  • mutually exclusive events are events which cannot occur together
  • P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B)
  • if A and B are independent, P(A and B) = P(A)⋅P(B)