Statistics > SOPHIA Milestone > Sophia Statistics Unit 3 Milestone.pdf. COMPLETE QUIZES WITH RATIONALE ANSWERS. RATED A+ (All)

Sophia Statistics Unit 3 Milestone.pdf. COMPLETE QUIZES WITH RATIONALE ANSWERS. RATED A+

Document Content and Description Below

Which of the following is a property of binomial distributions? The sum of the probabilities of successes and failures is always 1. All trials are dependent. The expected value is equal to the numb... er of successes in the experiment. There are exactly three possible outcomes for each trial. RATIONALE Recall that for any probability distribution, the sum of all the probabilities must sum to 1. CONCEPT Binomial Distribution I need help with this question 2 Zhi and her friends moved on to the card tables at the casino. Zhi wanted to figure out the probability of drawing a face card or an Ace. Choose the correct probability of drawing a face card or an Ace. Answer choices are in the form of a percentage, rounded to the nearest whole number. 8% 4% 31% 25% RATIONALE Since the two events, drawing a face card and drawing an ace card, are non-overlapping, we can use the following formula: CONCEPT "Either/Or" Probability for Non-Overlapping Events I need help with this question 3 John is playing a game with a standard deck of playing cards. He wants to draw a jack on the first try. Which of the following statements is true? The probability that John draws a jack on the first try is 1/13. If John replaces the card, re-shuffles, and draws again, the probability that he will pull another jack increases. The probability that John draws a jack on the first try is 1/13. If John replaces the card, re-shuffles, and draws again, the probability that he will pull another jack stays the same. The probability that John draws a jack on the first try is 3/13. If John replaces the card, re-shuffles, and draws again, the probability that he will pull another jack stays the same. The probability that John draws a jack on the first try is 1/13. If John replaces the card, re-shuffles, and draws again, the probability that he will pull another jack decreases. RATIONALE Events are said to be independent if one event does not influence the likelihood of the other. Since John reshuffles the deck and puts the card back in the deck, the probability should be the same and the first draw will not influence the second. CONCEPT Independent vs. Dependent Events I need help with this question 4 A magician asks an audience member to pick any number from 6 to 15. What is the theoretical probability that an individual chooses the number the magician has in mind? RATIONALE If we suppose that the card chosen by the magician is fixed, then there are 10 possible values, {6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, or 15}, that are all equally likely. So, the probability that a specific value is chosen is: CONCEPT Theoretical Probability/A Prior [Show More]

Last updated: 1 year ago

Preview 1 out of 22 pages

Reviews( 0 )

$7.00

Add to cart

Instant download

Can't find what you want? Try our AI powered Search

OR

GET ASSIGNMENT HELP
51
0

Document information


Connected school, study & course


About the document


Uploaded On

Mar 30, 2022

Number of pages

22

Written in

Seller


seller-icon
A grade master

Member since 3 years

38 Documents Sold


Additional information

This document has been written for:

Uploaded

Mar 30, 2022

Downloads

 0

Views

 51

Document Keyword Tags

More From A grade master

View all A grade master's documents »

Recommended For You

What is Browsegrades

In Browsegrades, a student can earn by offering help to other student. Students can help other students with materials by upploading their notes and earn money.

We are here to help

We're available through e-mail, Twitter, Facebook, and live chat.
 FAQ
 Questions? Leave a message!

Follow us on
 Twitter

Copyright © Browsegrades · High quality services·