7.E: Probability (Exercises)
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You may want to use the Binomial Calculator for some of these exercises.
General Questions
Q1
- What is the probability of rolling a pair of dice and obtaining a total score of \(9\) or more?
- What is the probability of rolling a pair of dice and obtaining a total score of \(7\)? (relevant section)
Q2
A box contains four black pieces of cloth, two striped pieces, and six dotted pieces. A piece is selected randomly and then placed back in the box. A second piece is selected randomly. What is the probability that:
- both pieces are dotted?
- the first piece is black and the second piece is dotted?
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one piece is black and one piece is striped?
(relevant section)
Q3
A card is drawn at random from a deck.
- What is the probability that it is an ace or a king?
- What is the probability that it is either a red card or a black card? (relevant section)
Q4
The probability that you will win a game is \(0.45\).
- If you play the game \(80\) times, what is the most likely number of wins?
- What are the mean and standard deviation of a binomial distribution with \(\pi =0.45\) and \(N = 80\)? (relevant section)
Q5
A fair coin is flipped \(9\) times. What is the probability of getting exactly \(6\) heads? (relevant section)
Q6
When Susan and Jessica play a card game, Susan wins \(60\%\) of the time. If they play \(9\) games, what is the probability that Jessica will have won more games than Susan? (relevant section)
Q7
You flip a coin three times.
- What is the probability of getting heads on only one of your flips?
- What is the probability of getting heads on at least one flip? (relevant section & relevant section)
Q8
A test correctly identifies a disease in \(95\%\) of people who have it. It correctly identifies no disease in \(94\%\) of people who do not have it. In the population, \(3\%\) of the people have the disease. What is the probability that you have the disease if you tested positive? (relevant section)
Q9
A jar contains \(10\) blue marbles, \(5\) red marbles, \(4\) green marbles, and \(1\) yellow marble. Two marbles are chosen (without replacement).
- What is the probability that one will be green and the other red?
- What is the probability that one will be blue and the other yellow? (relevant section)
Q10
You roll a fair die five times, and you get a \(6\) each time. What is the probability that you get a \(6\) on the next roll? (relevant section)
Q11
You win a game if you roll a die and get a \(2\) or a \(5\). You play this game \(60\) times.
- What is the probability that you win between \(5\) and \(10\) times (inclusive)?
- What is the probability that you will win the game at least \(15\) times?
- What is the probability that you will win the game at least \(40\) times?
- What is the most likely number of wins.
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What is the probability of obtaining the number of wins in d?
(relevant section)
Q12
In a baseball game, Tommy gets a hit \(30\%\) of the time when facing this pitcher. Joey gets a hit \(25\%\) of the time. They are both coming up to bat this inning.
- What is the probability that Joey or Tommy (but not both) will get a hit?
- What is the probability that neither player gets a hit?
- What is the probability that they both get a hit? (relevant section)
Q13
An unfair coin has a probability of coming up heads of \(0.65\). The coin is flipped \(50\) times. What is the probability it will come up heads \(25\) or fewer times? (Give answer to at least \(3\) decimal places). (relevant section)
Q14
You draw two cards from a deck, what is the probability that
- both of them are face cards (king, queen, or jack)?
- What is the probability that you draw two cards from a deck and both of them are hearts? (relevant section)
Q15
True/False: You are more likely to get a pattern of \(HTHHHTHTTH\) than \(HHHHHHHHTT\) when you flip a coin \(10\) times. (relevant section)
Q16
True/False: Suppose that at your regular physical exam you test positive for a relatively rare disease. You will need to start taking medicine if you have the disease, so you ask your doctor about the accuracy of the test. It turns out that the test is \(98\%\) accurate. The probability that you have Disease \(X\) is therefore \(0.98\) and the probability that you do not have it is \(0.02\). (relevant section)
Questions from Case Studies
The following questions are from the Diet and Health (DH) case study.
Q17
(DH#1)
- What percentage of people on the AHA diet had some sort of illness or death?
- What is the probability that if you randomly selected a person on the AHA diet, he or she would have some sort of illness or death? (relevant section)
- If \(3\) people on the AHA diet are chosen at random, what is the probability that they will all be healthy? (relevant section)
Q18
(DH#2)
- What percentage of people on the Mediterranean diet had some sort of illness or death?
- What is the probability that if you randomly selected a person on the Mediterranean diet, he or she would have some sort of illness or death? (relevant section)
- What is the probability that if you randomly selected a person on the Mediterranean diet, he or she would have cancer? (relevant section)
- If you randomly select five people from the Mediterranean diet, what is the probability that they would all be healthy? (relevant section)
The following questions are from (reproduced with permission)
Visit the site
Q19
Five faces of a fair die are painted black, and one face is painted white. The die is rolled six times. Which of the following results is more likely?
a. Black side up on five of the rolls; white side up on the other roll
b. Black side up on all six rolls
c. a and b are equally likely
Q20
One of the items on the student survey for an introductory statistics course was "Rate your intelligence on a scale of \(1\) to \(10\)." The distribution of this variable for the \(100\) women in the class is presented below. What is the probability of randomly selecting a woman from the class who has an intelligence rating that is LESS than seven (\(7\))?
| Intelligence Rating | Count |
| 5 | 12 |
| 6 | 24 |
| 7 | 38 |
| 8 | 23 |
| 9 | 2 |
| 10 | 1 |
a. \((12 + 24)/100 = 0.36\)
b. \((12 + 24 + 38)/100 = 0.74\)
c. \(38/100 = 0.38\)
d. \((23 + 2 + 1)/100 = 0.26\)
e. None of the above.
Q21
You roll \(2\) fair six-sided dice. Which of the following outcomes is most likely to occur on the next roll?
- Getting double \(3\).
- Getting a 3 and a \(4\).
- They are equally likely. Explain your choice.
Q22
If Tahnee flips a coin \(10\) times, and records the results (Heads or Tails), which outcome below is more likely to occur, \(A\) or \(B\)? Explain your choice.
| Throw Number | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| A | H | T | T | H | T | H | H | T | T | T |
| B | H | T | H | T | H | T | H | T | H | T |
Q23
A bowl has \(100\) wrapped hard candies in it. \(20\) are yellow, \(50\) are red, and \(30\) are blue. They are well mixed up in the bowl. Jenny pulls out a handful of \(10\) candies, counts the number of reds, and tells her teacher. The teacher writes the number of red candies on a list. Then, Jenny puts the candies back into the bowl, and mixes them all up again. Four of Jenny's classmates, Jack, Julie, Jason, and Jerry do the same thing. They each pick ten candies, count the reds, and the teacher writes down the number of reds. Then they put the candies back and mix them up again each time. The teacher's list for the number of reds is most likely to be (please select one):
a. \({8,9,7,10,9}\)
b. \({3,7,5,8,5}\)
c. \({5,5,5,5,5}\)
d. \({2,4,3,4,3}\)
e. \({3,0,9,2,8}\)
Q24
An insurance company writes policies for a large number of newly-licensed drivers each year. Suppose \(40\%\) of these are low-risk drivers, \(40\%\) are moderate risk, and \(20\%\) are high risk. The company has no way to know which group any individual driver falls in when it writes the policies. None of the low-risk drivers will have an at-fault accident in the next year, but \(10\%\) of the moderate-risk and \(20\%\) of the high-risk drivers will have such an accident. If a driver has an at-fault accident in the next year, what is the probability that he or she is high-risk?
Q25
You are to participate in an exam for which you had no chance to study, and for that reason cannot do anything but guess for each question (all questions being of the multiple choice type, so the chance of guessing the correct answer for each question is \(1/d\), \(d\) being the number of options per question; so in case of a \(4\)-choice question, your chance is \(0.25\)). Your instructor offers you the opportunity to choose amongst the following exam formats:
- \(6\) questions of the \(4\)-choice type; you pass when \(5\) or more answers are correct
- \(5\) questions of the \(5\)-choice type; you pass when \(4\) or more answers are correct
- \(4\) questions of the \(10\)-choice type; you pass when \(3\) or more answers are correct.
Rank the three exam formats according to their attractiveness. It should be clear that the format with the highest probability to pass is the most attractive format. Which would you choose and why?
Q26
Consider the question of whether the home team wins more than half of its games in the National Basketball Association. Suppose that you study a simple random sample of \(80\) professional basketball games and find that \(52\) of them are won by the home team.
- Assuming that there is no home court advantage and that the home team therefore wins \(50\%\) of its games in the long run, determine the probability that the home team would win \(65\%\) or more of its games in a simple random sample of \(80\) games.
- Does the sample information (that \(52\) of a random sample of \(80\) games are won by the home team) provide strong evidence that the home team wins more than half of its games in the long run? Explain.
Q27
A refrigerator contains \(6\) apples, \(5\) oranges, \(10\) bananas, \(3\) pears, \(7\) peaches, \(11\) plums, and \(2\) mangos.
- Imagine you stick your hand in this refrigerator and pull out a piece of fruit at random. What is the probability that you will pull out a pear?
- Imagine now that you put your hand in the refrigerator and pull out a piece of fruit. You decide you do not want to eat that fruit so you put it back into the refrigerator and pull out another piece of fruit. What is the probability that the first piece of fruit you pull out is a banana and the second piece you pull out is an apple?
- What is the probability that you stick your hand in the refrigerator one time and pull out a mango or an orange?
Select Answers
S1
- \(5/18 = 0.278\)
S 2
- \(1/6 = 0.167\)
S3
- \(2/13 = 0.154\)
S4
- mean = \(36\); SD = \(4.24\)
S5
\(0.164\)
S7
- \(7/8 = 0.875\)
S9
- \(2/19 = 0.105\)
S11
- \(0.937\)
S12
- \(0.075\)
S14
- \(1/17 = 0.0588\)
S17
- \(0.493\)
S18
- \(0.10\)