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Is this part of our syllabus? (1 Viewer)

jimmysmith560

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Since this question appeared in a Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper(s), it is part of the syllabus. The working for this question is as follows:

1635397442744.png

I hope this helps! :D
 

specificagent1

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Since this question appeared in a Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper(s), it is part of the syllabus. The working for this question is as follows:

View attachment 32965

I hope this helps! :D
what paper is this? also i did not know this content existed... so screwed. Dont really understand all the notations and the A' stuff, i just do probability by thinking (if that makes sense?)
 

jimmysmith560

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what paper is this? also i did not know this content existed... so screwed. Dont really understand all the notations and the A' stuff, i just do probability by thinking (if that makes sense?)
This is from the Hunters Hill High School Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper.

Since this is a multiple-choice question, your working does not matter as long as you get the correct answer.

The apostrophe is used to denote the complement of a set. A' is all the items that are not in set A.
 

specificagent1

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This is from the Hunters Hill High School Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper.

Since this is a multiple-choice question, your working does not matter as long as you get the correct answer.

The apostrophe is used to denote the complement of a set. A' is all the items that are not in set A.
what does the | mean. So what does P(B|A') geeze can do calculus but not this... rip me
 

5uckerberg

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| means what is the probability of something given that the previous event has occurred. Eg, P(B|A) is the probability of B given A. Independent result is when A=A' in terms of probability where A' refers to the complement of the set of A, and usually A=p and A'=1-p which is the complement where p refers to probability, but if they are equal then p=0.5 and this is an even chance which implies results are independent.

and

The independent part is very apparent because the formula can be written like this

I wanted to ask have I made a mistake somewhere?
 
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specificagent1

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| means what is the probability of something given that the previous event has occurred. Eg, P(B|A) is the probability of B given A. Independent result is when A=A' because usually A=p and A'=1-p but if they are equal then p=0.5 and this is an even chance which implies results are independent.

I wanted to ask have I made a mistake somewhere?
ummm could you dumb that down please. I dont really get it
 

jimmysmith560

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ummm could you dumb that down please. I dont really get it
As was mentioned above, the vertical line "|" means "given that". This means that in the case of P(B | A'), the probability of B depends on that of A', meaning you must be mindful of this in your calculations in order to provide a correct answer.

A more detailed way of solving this question is as follows:

1635399623102.png

Here, the following formula is being used:

1635399684969.png
 

cossine

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ummm could you dumb that down please. I dont really get it
@ specificagent it look like Jimmy has answered

Just couple points

- Make sure to remember the definition of conditional probability
- What is the relationship between logic and set theory operators
- When do you use bayes theorem over the definition of conditional probability
 

CM_Tutor

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Another approach...

Consider a tree diagram:

BoS - tree diagram.png

The question already gives us that .

Following on, let , and note that .

The rule for conditional probability is that


which we need to use interpret the information that has been provided.

We seek the condition for events and to be independent, which requires that


Now, our first piece of information is that :


And, our second piece of information is that :

 

CM_Tutor

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Some other conditional probability / independence questions

Girraween 2020 q3
Manly Selective 2020 q3, 19
Sydney Girls 2020 q7, 36
Killara 2020 q10
Normanhurst Boys 2020 q10, 20
Sydney Boys 2020 q28
Sydney Grammar 2020 q28
North Sydney Girls 2020 q29
North Sydney Boys 2020 q29

I'm pretty sure these are all on THSC, FYI
 

CM_Tutor

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And, this question from the Hogwarts Trial...Hogwarts Adv Trial Q 13b.png

The answer is .
 

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