probability (1 Viewer)

kunny funt

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There are two events A and B. Probability of at least one of the two is 0.1 and probability of exactly one of the two is 0.08. Then what is the probability of both A and B?
 

Archman

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withoutaface said:
A+b=.1
A+b-ab=.08=.1-.02

:.ab=.02
p(exactly one happening)=p(at least one happening) - p(both happening)
so it is 0.02
but withoutaface had the wrong reasoning
the chance of at least one happening is not a+b
it's 1-p(none happening) = 1-(1-a)(1-b) = a+b-ab

while the chance of exactly one happening is not a+b-ab
it is a(1-b)+b(1-a) = a+b-2ab
 

withoutaface

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Archman said:
p(exactly one happening)=p(at least one happening) - p(both happening)
so it is 0.02
but withoutaface had the wrong reasoning
the chance of at least one happening is not a+b
it's 1-p(none happening) = 1-(1-a)(1-b) = a+b-ab

while the chance of exactly one happening is not a+b-ab
it is a(1-b)+b(1-a) = a+b-2ab
Thanks for that archman, poor technique's fucked me up too many times in the past. :-/
 

kunny funt

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i used a venn diagram which made it reasonably easy to understand:

p(at least one happening) = p(A or B) = 0.10 (area made by two circles)

p(exactly one) = p[(A and 1-B) or (1-A and B)] (area as above minus the overlap)
= 0.08

Therefore P(A and B) is the overlap which is 0.10 - 08 = 0.02 .....
 

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