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- https://stats.libretexts.org/Workbench/Introduction_to_Statistical_Methods_(Yuba_College)/05%3A_Probability/5.05%3A_Independent_EventsTwo trials (or events or results of a random experiment) are independent trials if the outcome of one trial does not influence the outcome of the second trial. The event of getting a head on the first...Two trials (or events or results of a random experiment) are independent trials if the outcome of one trial does not influence the outcome of the second trial. The event of getting a head on the first flip is independent of getting a head on the second flip since the probability does not change with each flip of the coin. There is an assumption that the three students are not related and that the probability of one owning a laptop is independent of the other people owning a laptop.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/Fullerton_College/Math_120%3A__Introductory_Statistics_(Ikeda)/03%3A_Probability/3.05%3A_Independent_EventsThe event of getting heads on the first flip is independent of getting heads on the second flip since the probability does not change with each flip of the coin. There is an assumption that the three ...The event of getting heads on the first flip is independent of getting heads on the second flip since the probability does not change with each flip of the coin. There is an assumption that the three students are not related and that the probability of one owning a laptop is independent of the other students owning a laptop. The probability of “at least one owns a laptop” is the complement of “none owns a laptop” (0 students) since the two events make up the total sample space.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Workbench/Statistics_for_Behavioral_Science_Majors/03%3A_Probability/3.05%3A_Independent_EventsTwo trials (or events or results of a random experiment) are independent trials if the outcome of one trial does not influence the outcome of the second trial. The event of getting a head on the first...Two trials (or events or results of a random experiment) are independent trials if the outcome of one trial does not influence the outcome of the second trial. The event of getting a head on the first flip is independent of getting a head on the second flip since the probability does not change with each flip of the coin. There is an assumption that the three students are not related and that the probability of one owning a laptop is independent of the other people owning a laptop.