This document provides an introduction to probability concepts including:
- Sample space is the set of all possible outcomes of an experiment.
- Events are subsets of outcomes from the sample space.
- Axioms state the probability of any event is between 0 and 1, and the probability of the entire sample space is 1.
- Complement and addition rules describe how to calculate probabilities of combined events.
- Conditional probability is the probability of one event given another has occurred.
- Independent events do not influence each other's probabilities.
- Bayes' theorem updates probabilities based on new information using conditional probability.
This document provides an introduction to probability concepts including:
- Sample space is the set of all possible outcomes of an experiment.
- Events are subsets of outcomes from the sample space.
- Axioms state the probability of any event is between 0 and 1, and the probability of the entire sample space is 1.
- Complement and addition rules describe how to calculate probabilities of combined events.
- Conditional probability is the probability of one event given another has occurred.
- Independent events do not influence each other's probabilities.
- Bayes' theorem updates probabilities based on new information using conditional probability.
This document provides an introduction to probability concepts including:
- Sample space is the set of all possible outcomes of an experiment.
- Events are subsets of outcomes from the sample space.
- Axioms state the probability of any event is between 0 and 1, and the probability of the entire sample space is 1.
- Complement and addition rules describe how to calculate probabilities of combined events.
- Conditional probability is the probability of one event given another has occurred.
- Independent events do not influence each other's probabilities.
- Bayes' theorem updates probabilities based on new information using conditional probability.
This document provides an introduction to probability concepts including:
- Sample space is the set of all possible outcomes of an experiment.
- Events are subsets of outcomes from the sample space.
- Axioms state the probability of any event is between 0 and 1, and the probability of the entire sample space is 1.
- Complement and addition rules describe how to calculate probabilities of combined events.
- Conditional probability is the probability of one event given another has occurred.
- Independent events do not influence each other's probabilities.
- Bayes' theorem updates probabilities based on new information using conditional probability.
Introduction to Business Analytics - Batch 23@XIME
Experiment is any procedure that can be repeated many times and has a well-defined set of outcomes
The set of all possible outcomes for an
experiment is the sample space
Event is a subset of points in a sample space
Quiz
You toss two fair dice. What is the sample
space?
The total number of dots showing on two
dice is eight. What is this?
When two coins are tossed, a total of one
head is observed. What is this? Axioms
For any event E, 0<=P(E)<=1
If the event consists of all the points in the
sample space, then P(E) = ? Law of Complements
P(Not A) = 1 - P(A)
What is the chance that you do not throw a
total of 2? Mutually Exclusive Events
If two events cannot occur simultaneously, the events are mutually
exclusive Event A= Interest rate on fixed deposits goes up by at least 10% in 2018 and Event B = Interest rate on fixed deposits goes up by at least 15% in 2018, are the events A and B mutually exclusive? If event A = total with two dice is 4 and event B = total with two dice is 8, are the two events A and B mutually exclusive? Additive rule for computing probabilities
P(A or B) = P(A)+P(B) - P(A and B){You
subtract this to avoid double counting}
If A and B are mutually exclusive what is P(A
or B)?
If there is a 50% chance of rain on Saturday
and a 50% chance of rain on Sunday, can we be certain of rain during the weekend? Independent Events
Two events A and B are independent if
knowing that one event has occurred does not change your estimate of the probability of the other event occurring
Two events are independent if and only if
P(A and B) = P(A) * P(B) Are these independent events?
A= Average salary offered to students jumps
to 8L/year in December 2018
B = Students can enter the hostel at 3 am on
Sunday and Saturday(Low, very low, very very low probability ) Conditional Probability
We define the conditional probability of event
B occurring, given that event A has occurred as P(B|A) = P(A and B)/P(A)
Rewrite as P(A and B)=P(A)*P(B|A) or
P(B)*P(A|B)
If P(B|A) = P(B), what can you tell about
events A and B? Suppose you toss two dice. A = Event you get at least one 6 and B = Event total of the two dice is 10. What is P(B|A)? Law of total probability
Refers to computing the probability of an
event by adding together the probabilities of several mutually exclusive events
Sometimes we can compute the probability of
an event by conditioning it on other events. Suppose 5% of used cars have flood damage and 80% of those cars later develop engine problems
Also, suppose that 10% of cars that are not
damaged by flood later develop engine problems.
What is the chance that a randomly chosen car
will have engine problems?
P(EP)=P(EP and FL) + P(EP and no FL) = P(EP|
FL)* P(FL) +P(EP|no FL)* P(no FL) Contingency Table Engine Problem No engine problem
Flood Damage 0.04 0.01
No Flood Damage 0.095 0.855
Bayes’ Theorem
Understand conditional probability and the
law of total probability
In many situations, we are trying to estimate
the probabilities of various states of the world
Then we receive information that we use to
change our probability estimates Consider a 40 year old woman with no risk factors for cancer
Event C = Woman has cancer
Event NC = Woman does not have cancer
Given no other information, probabilities of
these events(known as prior or a priori) are given by P(C)= .004 and P(NC) = .996 Now we receive more information(results of a test for cancer) that change our estimates of prior probabilities
Suppose a test yields a positive(+) result
To update our probability estimates, we need
to know the likelihood of a positive test result for each state of the world
These are known-: P(+|C) = 0.80 and P(+|
NC) = 0.10 Now we want to update our prior probability(.004) of cancer after receiving the positive test result
The new probability P(C|+) is called
posterior or a posteriori probability
Applying the definitions of conditional
probability and the law of total probability we find… P(C|+) = P(C and +)/P(+)
P(C and +) = P(+|C)*P(C) = ?
P(+) = P(+|C)*P(C)+P(+|NC)*P(NC) = ?
What is a false positive?
10,000 women + Test -Test
Cancer
No Cancer Are events A and Not A mutually exclusive?
Can mutually exclusive events be
independent? You are studying finance and marketing. Assume that you have a 90% chance of getting an A in Finance and an 80% chance of getting an A in marketing. If your performance in each of the two courses is independent of the other, what is the probability of your getting at least one ‘A’ ? Suppose 10% of all adults watch Big Boss. Assume that 80% of these viewers are women and half of all adults are men. Compute the probability that a given woman or man is a viewer of Big Boss. Assume that one in every 1000 people is a liar(incapable of telling the truth). Also, suppose a lie-detector test is 98% accurate. That is, if a person is lying there is a 98% chance that the test will indicate the person is lying. Also, if the person is not lying, there is a 98% chance the test will indicate the person is not lying. If the lie-detector test indicates the person is lying, what is the chance the person is lying? Of an insurance company’s policyholders, 80% are high risk and 20% are low risk. assume nobody has more than one accident in a year. Also, assume 10% of high-risk people have an accident during a year and 3% of low-risk people have an accident during a year. if you randomly choose a policyholder who had an accident last year, what is the chance that he or she is a high- risk policyholder?