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SAT Math 1.1 Numbers and Operations. How many combinations of beverage and cereal can be made?
Independent and Dependent Events 7748 Views
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Description:
This video covers both independent and dependent events, although we much prefer independent events. Dependent events are just so dang clingy.
Transcript
- 00:04
Independent and Dependent Events, a la Shmoop. Congratulations! You've been chosen as a contestant
- 00:15
on that game show where people dress up in silly costumes and try to win prizes.
- 00:24
You're dressed as Euclid, but the host keeps calling you Gandalf. Go figure.
- 00:30
To win the car, you have to spin this spinner... And meet two conditions:
- 00:37
One. You have to spin an odd number on the first spin.
Full Transcript
- 00:42
Two: The sum of the two numbers you spin must be odd.
- 00:47
This is a little more complicated than Plinko... We want to know if, using the formal definition
- 00:55
of independenceÉ É events A and B are independent or dependent.
- 01:06
Before we start, lets define what makes an event independent or dependentÉ
- 01:11
A dependent event depends on the outcome of a secondary eventÉ
- 01:19
Éwhile an independent event doesnÕt have to answer to anybody. HeÕs more of a free spirit.
- 01:48
As the audience cheers you on, let's give this problem a spin.
- 01:54
Here's a chart of the possible outcomes. The numbers down the side show up on the first
- 02:02
spin; the numbers across the top show up on the second spin.
- 02:15
The numbers in the table show the sum of the two spins.
- 02:21
Nowhere in there is your new car. Don't get your hopes up.
- 02:35
Since both one and three are odd, the probability of getting an odd number on your first spin
- 02:40
is good. The probability of A is two out of three.
- 02:48
It's a little more difficult to spin twice and still have an odd number.
- 03:04
Since there are 9 total possible outcomes and 4 of them are oddÉ
- 03:11
The probability of B on its own is four out of nine.
- 03:18
But remember, the only results that count are the ones that occur when you spin an odd
- 03:26
number first. The probability of A and B happeningÉ the
- 03:39
only outcomes that occur in both tablesÉ is two out of nine.
- 03:44
They don't make these things easy. Maybe you should just take what's behind curtain number
- 03:51
two. But what we really want to know is if these
- 03:56
events are independent or dependent. Since the probability of A, two-thirds, times
- 04:11
the probability of B, four-ninths, which comes out to eight-twenty-sevenths, does NOT equal
- 04:27
the probability of A and B, which is two-ninths, the events are dependent.
- 04:38
We can't give you a car, but we can help give you a better grade.
- 04:44
Which is even better, really. At least with a better grade, you donÕt have to make monthly
- 04:49
payments.
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