× Didn't find what you were looking for? Ask a question
Top Posters
Since Sunday
5
a
5
k
5
c
5
B
5
l
5
C
4
s
4
a
4
t
4
i
4
r
4
New Topic  
drewsy20 drewsy20
wrote...
Posts: 537
Rep: 0 0
6 years ago
If events A and B are defined on a sample space, with P(A) = 0.25 and P(B  A) = 0.18, then the probability that A and B can both occur at the same time is
 a. 0.250
  b. 0.180
  c. 0.070
  d. 0.045

Q. 2

Which of the following statements is always correct?
 a. P(A and B) = P(A) P(B)
  b. P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B)
  c. P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B)
  d. P(A) = P(BA)

Q. 3

If P(A) = 0.60, P(B) = 0.63, and P(A and B) = 0.73, then P(A or B) is:
 a. 1.23.
  b. 0.50.
  c. 0.13.
  d. 0.10.

Q. 4

If P(A) = 0.45, P(B) = 0.35 and P(A and B) =0.25, then P(A  B) is:
 a. 1.4.
  b. 1.8.
  c. 0.714.
  d. 0.556.

Q. 5

If P(A) = 0.80, P(B) =0.70 and P(A or B) =0.90, then P(A and B) is:
 a. 0.10.
  b. 0.14.
  c. 0.60.
  d. 0.72.

Q. 6

A sample space is composed of three outcomes, called A, B, and C. Outcome A is twice as probable as B, and B is twice as probable as C. The probabilities of A, B, and C would be:
 a. P(A) = 0.5; P(B) = 0.33; P(C) = 0.167.
  b. P(A) = 0.4; P(B) = 0.4; P(C) = 0.2.
  c. P(A) = 0.57; P(B) = 0.286; P(C) = 0.143.
  d. Insufficient information given to determine answer.
Read 34 times
1 Reply
Replies
Answer verified by a subject expert
SDEAN2319SDEAN2319
wrote...
Posts: 358
Rep: 1 0
6 years ago
Sign in or Sign up in seconds to unlock everything for free
1

Related Topics

drewsy20 Author
wrote...

6 years ago
I appreciate what you did here, answered it right Smiling Face with Open Mouth
wrote...

Yesterday
Just got PERFECT on my quiz
wrote...

2 hours ago
You make an excellent tutor!
New Topic      
Explore
Post your homework questions and get free online help from our incredible volunteers
  1322 People Browsing
Related Images
  
 231
  
 1092
  
 174
Your Opinion
Who will win the 2024 president election?
Votes: 3
Closes: November 4

Previous poll results: How often do you eat-out per week?