Chapter 5 Practice Problems Solutions
Chapter 5 Practice Problems Solutions
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Chapter 5 Multiple Choice Practice /vt
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Directions. ldentify the chaice that best completes the statement or answers the question. Check your answers
and note your pertormance when you are finished.
1. The probability that you will win a prize in a carnival game is about 1/7. During the last nine attempts, you
have failed to win. You decide to give it one last shot. Assuming the outcomes are independent from game
to game, the probability that you will win is:
(A) 1/7
{B) (1/7) - (1/7)'
(C) (1t7) + (1/7)'g
(D) 1/10
(E) 7/10
2. A friend has placed alarge number of plastic disks in a hat and invited you to select one at random. He
informs you that half are red and half are blue. lf you draw a disk, record the color, replace it, and repeat
100 times, which of the following is true?
(A) lt is unlikely you wiil choose red more than 50 times.
(B) lf you draw 10 blue disks in a row, it is more likely you will draw a red on the next try.
(C) The overall proportion of red disks drawn should be close to 0.50.
(D) The chance that the 100ih draw will be red depends on the results of the first 99 draws.
(E) All of the above are true.
3. The two-way table below gives information on males and females at a high school and their preferred
music format.
CD mp3 Vinyl Totals
Males 146 106 48 300
Females 146 64 4A 2N
Totals 292 170 88 550
You select one student frorn ihis group at random. Which of the following statement is true about the
events "prefers vinyl" and "Male"?
(A)Theeventsaremutuallyexclusiveandindependent.
(B) The events are not mutually exclusive but they are independent.
(C) The events are mutually exclusive, but they are noi independent.
_(Dj The events are not mutually exclusive, nor are they independent.
(E) The events are independent, but we do not have enough information to determine if they are
mutually exclusive.
4. Peopie with type O-negative blood are universal donors. That is, any patient can receive a transfusion of
O-negative biood. An$ 7.2% of the American population has O-negative blood. If '10 people appear at
random to give blood, what is the probability that at least 1 of them is a universal donor?
(A) 0
(B) 0.280
(c) 0.526
(D) 0.720
(E) 1
96 Strive for a 5: Preparing for the AP@ Statistics Examination
5. A die is loaded so that the number 6 comes up three times as often as any other number. What is the
probability of rolling a 4, 5, or 6?
() 2/3
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(D) 1/3
{E) 1t4
6. You draw two candies at random from a bag that has 20,red, 19glepn, 15 orange, and 5 blue candies
is the probability that both candies are red?
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Event A occurs with probability 0.8. The conditional probability that event B occurs, given that A occurs, is
0.5. The probability that both A and B occur
(A) 0,3
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(D) 0.8
(E) 1.0
9. At Lakeville South High School,60%o of students have high-speed internet access, 30% have a mobile
computing device, and 2Ao/o have both. The proportion of students that have neither high-speed internet
access nor a mobile computing dev_ice-is:
(A) o% r "-,----* I
(BJ 10% i ,''"fr ,' ] ;,-.i {..1 .' l
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(D) B0%
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(E) e0%
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10. Experience has shown that a certain lie detector willshow ?gg-sjlryg*r-qggjlE Otc_qles a lie) 10% of
95% of the tifie-w-hen:a peison EliliiglSuF0asetn-m a
Jh*lfg_yhgl€ person is telling the truth and
nenfien-#mdgffisusirdfitii i5 subTefieh to a lie detector test regarding a recent one-person crime. The
probability of readings if all suspects plead innocent and are telting the truth is:
(A) 0.40e
(B) 0.735 -'St,r r-s '$f .' :"''r {T .! l^ *i<^
(c] 0.00001 i.! . ., I '.ll,t, il '
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s8 strive for a 5: Preparing for the AP@ Statistics Examination
and apply
After this section, you should be able to describe a probability model for chance behavior
the basic probability rules to answer questions about events.
3. What is P(Ac)?
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Chapter 5: Probability 89
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Chapter 5: Probability 91
Check for Understanding: _I can compute conditional probabilities and _ I can determine
whether two events are independent
ls there a relationship between gender and candy preference? Suppose 200 high school students
were asked to complete a survey about their favorite candies. The table below shows the gender of
each student and their favorite candy.
Define A to be the event that a randomly selected student is male and B to be the event that a
randomly selected student likes Skiftles. Are the events A and B independent? Justify your answer.
92 Strive for a 5: Preparing for the AP@ Statistics Examination
Check for Understanding: _ I can use a tree diagram to describe chance behavior and
_ I can use the general multiplication rule to solve probability questrbns
A study of high school juniors in three districts- Lakeville, Sheboygan, and Omaha - was conducted
to determine enrollment trends in AP mathematics courses-Calculus or Statistics. 42Yo of students
in the study came from Lakeville, ST%6 came from Sheboygan, and the rest came from Omaha. ln
Lakeville, 64% o'f juniors took Statistics and the rest took Calculus. 58% of juniors in Sheboygan and
49o/o of juniors in Omaha took Statistics while the rest took Calculus in each district. No juniors took
both Statistics and Calculus. Describe this situation using a tree diagram and find the probability that
a randomly selected student from in the study took Statistics.
Chapter 5: Probability
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262 Strive for a 5: Preparing for the AP@ Statistics Examination
Chapter 5: Probability
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8. The collection of outcomes that occur in both of 1. The law of large states that the
two events. INTERSECTION] proportion of times an outcome occurs in many
9. A collection of outcomes from a chance process. repetitions will approach a single value.
lEVENrl INUMBERSI
11. The propofiion of times an outcome would occur 2.The probability that one event happens given
in a very long series of repetitions. another event is known to have happened.
IPROBABTLTTYI lcoNDrTroNALl
12. _Theorem can be used to find probabilities 3. The set of all possible outcomes for a chance
that require going "backward" in a tree diagram. process (two words). [SAMPLESPACE]
IBAYESI 4. The probability that two events both occur can
13. ln statistics, this doesn't mean "haphazard." lt be found using the general _ rule.
means "by chance." [HANDOM] IMULTTPLTCATTONI
15. The collection of outcomes that occur in either 5. P(A or B) can be found using the general
of two events. IUNION] rule. [ADDITION]
16. A _ diagram can help model chance 6. The imitation of chance behavior, based on a
behavior that involves a sequence of outcomes. model that reflects the situation. [SIMULATION]
lrREEl 7.The occurrence of one event has no effect on
the chance that another event will happen.
ITNDEPENDENTI
9. Another term for disjoint: Mutually
IEXCLUSTVEI
10. Two events that have no outcomes in common
and can never occur together. [DISJOINT]
AP Statistics Practice Test (page 336)
T5.1 c. Probability only tells us what happens approximately in the long run, not what will happen in the
short run.
T5.2 d. You need exactly 62 of the 100 2-digit numbers to represent the event "having heard of Coca-
cola.''
T5.4 b. AllZ-digit numbers among the first 10 are between 00 and 97 except 98.
T5.6 c. There are 285 students who either have a GPA below 2,have skipped many classes or both.
T5.7 e. There are 110 students who have skipped many classes. 80 of them have a GPA below 2.
T5.8 e. If A and B are independent, then we don't know whether B has occurred if A occurred. But if A
and B are mutually exclusive, then if B has occurred then we know that A couldn't have occurred.
T5.9 b. P(woman L., never married) = P(woman)+ P(never manied) - P(woman . never married).
T5.11 (a) Since each outcome is equally likely and there are 48 outcomes, each outcome has probability
a. th... are 27 waysin which the teacher wins (all boxes above and to the right of the diagonal line
48
indicating ties). So the probability that the teacher wins is 448 fq We use the fact that
get a3" so f (e) = -.!- urd there are 5 outcomes in which "you roll a 3" and the teacher still wins so
T5.12 (a)
oK 0.54
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Defective 0,09
OK 0.21
99 Defective 0.04
c <qe oK 0.06
(b) To get the probability that apart randomly chosen from all parts produced by this machine is
defective, add the probabilities from all branches in the tree that end in a defective paft.
P(defective) = 0.06 + 0.09 + 0.04 = 0.19. (c) First compute the conditional probabilities that the part was
P(Bldefectir.)=:?::0.4737.
\ r(cloerective)=901:0.210s.
\ ' sincethelargestofthesettuee
' 0.19 0.19
conditional probabilities is for machine B, given that a part is defective, it is most likely to have come
from machine B.
T5.la (a) Assign the numbers 01-17 to represent cars with out-of-state plates and the remaining 2-digit
numbers between 00 and 99 to represent other cars. Staft reading 2-digit numbers from a random number
table until you have found two numbers between 01 and 17 (repeats are allowed). Record how many 2-
digit numbers you had to read in order to get 2 numbers between 0 I and 1 7. Repeat many times for the
simulation. (b) The first sample is 41 05 09. The numbers in bold represent cars with out-of-state
plates. In this sample it took three cars to find two with out-of-state plates. The second sample is 20 3l
06 44 90 50 59 59 88 43 18 80 53 11. In this sample it took 14 cars to find two with out-of-state plates.
The third sample is 58 44 69 94 86 85 79 67 05 81 18 45 14. In this sample it took 13 cars to find two
with out-of-state plates.