A dispute between gamblers in 1654 led Pascal and Fermat to create the mathematical theory of probability. They established that the probability of an event occurring is equal to the number of favorable outcomes divided by the total number of possible outcomes. Later mathematicians built upon this work, including Huygens, Bernoulli, de Moivre, and Kolmogorov, helping to develop probability theory into the rigorous field it is today.
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Chapter 3
A dispute between gamblers in 1654 led Pascal and Fermat to create the mathematical theory of probability. They established that the probability of an event occurring is equal to the number of favorable outcomes divided by the total number of possible outcomes. Later mathematicians built upon this work, including Huygens, Bernoulli, de Moivre, and Kolmogorov, helping to develop probability theory into the rigorous field it is today.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A gambler's dispute in 1654 led to the creation of a
mathematical theory of probability by two famous
French mathematicians Blaise Pascal Pierre de Fermat Suppose a game has n equally likely outcomes, of which m outcomes correspond to winning. Probability of winning is m/n. Repeat a game several times under the same conditions. The probability of winning is approximately equal to the proportion of wins in the repeats. From Pascal and Fermats theory, Huygens wrote the first book on probability.
The book: devoted to calculating value(expectation) of a game of chance. treatise on problems associated with gambling(hypergeometric distribution).
Describes the probability of k successes in n draws without replacement from a finite population of size N containing exactly K successes. James Bernoulli (1654-1705) proved that the frequency method and the classical method are consistent. Abraham de Moivre (1667-1754) provided tools to make the classical method more useful, including the multiplication rule. obtained the normal approximation to the binomial distribution. almost found the Poisson distribution. In the 18 th century, many mathematicians found the classical method to be unrealistic for general use and were attempting to redefine probability in terms of the frequency method. Andrew Kolmogorov (1667-1754) developed the first rigorous approach to probability. built up probability theory from fundamental axioms comparable with Euclids treatment of geometry. PROBABILITY 101 Introduction Probability is the likelihood of an event occurring. Probability can be expressed in a variety of ways including a mathematically formal way such as using percentages. It can also be expressed using vocabulary such as "unlikely," "likely," "certain," or "possible." Examples in daily life Since it is sunny and hot, it is very likely I will go to the pool today. She comes to work late nearly everyday; so, it is likely she is going to be reprimanded. In a drawer of ten socks, 8 of them yellow, there is a twenty percent chance of choosing a sock that is not yellow. The probability of winning the lottery is one in a million. SAMPLE SPACE OF AN EXPERIMENT The set of all possible outcomes of an experiment is called the sample space and usually denoted by letter S. Each outcome in a sample space is called an element of the sample space or sample point. Different sample spaces may be used to demonstrate an experiment. EVENTS An event is a subset of a sample space It consists of all the elements of the sample space for which the event occurs Also, by subset, it mean that any part of a set , including the set as a whole and an empty set which is denoted by that has no element at all. Example A spinner has 4 equal sectors colored yellow, blue, green and red. What are the chances of landing on blue after spinning the spinner? What are the chances of landing on red?
Definition Example An experiment is a situation involving chance or probability that leads to results called outcomes. In the problem above, the experiment is spinning the spinner. An outcome is the result of a single trial of an experiment. The possible outcomes are landing on yellow, blue, green or red. An event is one or more outcomes of an experiment. One event of this experiment is landing on blue. Probability is the measure of how likely an event is. The probability of landing on blue is one fourth.
If A is an event, P (A) is read the probability of A
P (A) = number of favorable outcomes total number of outcomes Where 0 P(A) 1 PROBABILITIES OF COMPOUND EVENTS When probability involves two or more events, the events are compounded or combined in the form of Unions Intersections Complements UNIONS The unions of A and B is the subset of S that contains all the elements that are either in A, in B or in both. It is written as A or B and denoted by AUB using the word or A B INTERSECTION
The intersection of A and B is the subset of S that contains all the elements that are in both A and B. It is written as A and B denoted by AB using the word and,
A B COMPLEMENT The complement of A (A) is the subset of S that contains all the elements of S that are not in A. A B Example There are 48 families in a village. 32 of them have mango trees, 28 has an guava tress and 15 have both. A family is selected at random from the village. Determine the probability that the selected family has
a)Mango and guava trees b)Mango or guava tress c)Neither mango or guava tress
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN COMPOUND EVENTS
The relationship between compound events can be classified as: (1) Mutually exclusive (2) Not-mutually exclusive (3) Independent Mutually exclusive A B If two events cannot occur at the same time, they are said to be mutually exclusive. no intersection, an empty set
FORMULA TO FIND NUMBER OF OUTCOMES IN MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE EVENT In mutually exclusive events, there is no common outcome, thus no intersection. The number of outcomes in the two mutually exclusive events can be written as n(S) = n (A) + n (B)
FORMULA (GENERAL ADDITION RULE) TO FIND THE PROBABILITY OF MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE EVENTS
P (A or B) =P (A U B) = P (A) + P (B)
Non mutually exclusive A B there is common element(s) shared by the two events. the intersection of the two sets is not an empty set. FORMULA TO FIND NUMBER OF OUTCOMES IN NON-MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE EVENTS
In non-mutually exclusive events, there is/are common outcome/s, thus there is intersection. The number of outcomes in the two non-mutually exclusive events can be written as n(S) = n (A) + n (B) n (AB)
FORMULA (GENERAL ADDITION RULE) TO FIND THE PROBABILITY OF NON- MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE EVENTS
P (A or B) =P (A U B) = P (A) + P (B) P (AB)
Example A student is picked at random from a class. Events K, L, M and N are defined as: K = event that the student picked is a boy L = event that the student picked is a girl M= event that the student picked wear spectacles N = event that the student picked does not wears spectacles.
Determine whether the following pairs of events mutually exclusive? i)K and L ii)K and M iii)L and M
INDEPENDENT EVENTS DEFINITION 1 The two events are independents if the occurrence of one of them has no effect on the occurrences of the other. Two events A and B are independent if and only if P (AB) = P (A). P (B) Independent Event A dresser drawer contains one pair of socks with each of the following colors: blue, red, yellow, green and pink. Each pair is folded together in a matching set. You reach into the sock drawer and choose a pair of socks without looking. You replace this pair and then choose another pair of socks. What is the probability that you will choose the red pair of socks both times?
MULTIPLICATION RULE TO FIND THE PROBABILITY OF INDEPENDENT EVENTS
P (A and B) =P (A B) = P (A) x P (B)
P (A1 A2 A3 An) = P (A1) x P (A2) x P (A3) x P (An)
Conditional Probability The conditional probability of an event B in relationship to an event A is the probability that event B occurs given that event A has already occurred. The notation for conditional probability is P(B|A), read as the probability of B given A. The formula for conditional probability is: Example 2 A math teacher gave her class two tests. 25% of the class passed both tests and 42% of the class passed the first test. What percent of those who passed the first test also passed the second test?
P(Secon d|First) = P(First and Second) = 0.25 = 0.60 = 60% P(First) 0.42 Tree Diagram REPRESENT THE OUTCOMES IN MUTUALLY AND NON- MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE EVENTS BY TREE DIAGRAM A part from using Venn diagram, and addition rule formula, the outcomes in mutually and non- mutually exclusive events can be also be represented by tree diagram. In addition, the probability of both events can also be computed by using tree diagram. An important rule that needs to be remembered in using tree diagram is the complementary event concept. Example A bag contains 3 black balls and 5 white balls. Paul picks a ball at random from the bag and replaces it back in the bag. He mixes the balls in the bag and then picks another ball at random from the bag.