Edu Exam P Sample Sol

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SOCIETY OF ACTUARIES

EXAM P PROBABILITY

EXAM P SAMPLE SOLUTIONS

This set of sample questions includes those published on the probability topic for use with
previous versions of this examination. Questions from previous versions of this document that
are not relevant for the syllabus effective with the September 2022 administration have been
deleted. The questions have been renumbered. Unless indicated below, no questions have been
added to the version published for use with exams through July 2022.

Some of the questions in this study note are taken from past SOA examinations.

These questions are representative of the types of questions that might be asked of candidates
sitting for the Probability (P) Exam. These questions are intended to represent the depth of
understanding required of candidates. The distribution of questions by topic is not intended to
represent the distribution of questions on future exams.

Questions 271-287 were added July 2022.


Questions 288-319 were added August 2022.
Questions 234-236 and 282 were deleted October 2022
Questions 320-446 were added November 2023
Several questions that were duplicates of earlier questions were removed February 2024

Copyright 2024 by the Society of Actuaries.

Page 1 of 125
1. Solution: D

Let G = viewer watched gymnastics, B = viewer watched baseball, S = viewer watched soccer.
Then we want to find
Pr ( G ∪ B ∪ S )  =1 − Pr ( G ∪ B ∪ S )
c
 
1  Pr ( G ) + Pr ( B ) + Pr ( S ) − Pr ( G ∩ B ) − Pr ( G ∩ S ) − Pr ( B ∩ S ) + Pr ( G ∩ B ∩ S ) 
=−
1 − ( 0.28 + 0.29 + 0.19 − 0.14 − 0.10 − 0.12 + 0.08 ) =
= 1 − 0.48 =
0.52

2. Solution: A

Let R = referral to a specialist and L = lab work. Then


P[ R ∩ L]= P[ R] + P[ L] − P[ R ∪ L]= P[ R] + P[ L] − 1 + P[( R ∪ L)c ]
′] 0.30 + 0.40 − 1 + 0.35
= p[ R] + P[ L] − 1 + P[ R c ∩ L= = 0.05.

3. Solution: D

First note
P [ A ∪ B=] P [ A] + P [ B ] − P [ A ∩ B ]
P  A ∪ B c  = P [ A] + P  B c  − P  A ∩ B c 
Then add these two equations to get
P [ A ∪ B ] + P  A ∪ B=
c
( ) (
 2 P [ A] + P [ B ] + P  B c  − P [ A ∩ B ] + P  A ∩ B c  )
0.9 2 P [ A] + 1 − P ( A ∩ B ) ∪ ( A ∩ B c ) 
0.7 +=
1.6 2 P [ A] + 1 − P [ A]
=
P [ A] = 0.6

Page 2 of 125
4. Solution: A

For i = 1,2, let Ri = event that a red ball is drawn from urn i and let Bi = event that a blue ball is
drawn from urn i. Then, if x is the number of blue balls in urn 2,
0.44= Pr[( R1 ∩ R2 )  ( B1 ∩ B2 )]= Pr[ R1 ∩ R2 ] + Pr [ B1 ∩ B2 ]
= Pr [ R1 ] Pr [ R2 ] + Pr [ B1 ] Pr [ B2 ]
4  16  6  x 
=  +  
10  x + 16  10  x + 16 

Therefore,

32 3x 3x + 32
2.2 = + =
x + 16 x + 16 x + 16
2.2 x + 35.2 =3 x + 32
0.8 x = 3.2
x=4

5. Solution: D

Let N(C) denote the number of policyholders in classification C. Then


N(Young and Female and Single)
= N(Young and Female) – N(Young and Female and Married)
= N(Young) – N(Young and Male) – [N(Young and Married) – N(Young and Married and
Male)]
= 3000 – 1320 – (1400 – 600) = 880.

6. Solution: B

Let
H = event that a death is due to heart disease
F = event that at least one parent suffered from heart disease
Then based on the medical records,
210 − 102 108
P  H ∩ = F c  =
937 937
937 − 312 625
P  F c  =
=
937 937
P  H ∩ F c  108 625 108
and P  H | F= c
 = = = 0.173
P  F c  937 937 625

Page 3 of 125
7. Solution: D

Let A = event that a policyholder has an auto policy and H = event that a policyholder has a
homeowners policy. Then,
Pr ( A ∩ H ) =0.15
Pr ( A ∩ H c ) = Pr ( A ) − Pr ( A ∩ H ) = 0.65 − 0.15 = 0.50
Pr ( Ac ∩ H ) = Pr ( H ) − Pr ( A ∩ H ) = 0.50 − 0.15 = 0.35
and the portion of policyholders that will renew at least one policy is given by
0.4 Pr ( A ∩ H c ) + 0.6 Pr ( Ac ∩ H ) + 0.8 Pr ( A ∩ H )
( 0.4 )( 0.5) + ( 0.6 )( 0.35) + ( 0.8)( 0.15) =
= 0.53 (=
53% )

8. Solution: D

Let C = event that patient visits a chiropractor and T = event that patient visits a physical
therapist. We are given that
[C ] Pr [T ] + 0.14
Pr=
Pr ( C ∩ T ) =
0.22
Pr ( C c ∩ T c ) =
0.12
Therefore,
1 Pr C c ∩ T c  =Pr [C ∪ T ] =Pr [C ] + Pr [T ] − Pr [C ∩ T ]
0.88 =−
= Pr [T ] + 0.14 + Pr [T ] − 0.22
= 2 Pr [T ] − 0.08
or
P [T ] =
( 0.88 + 0.08) 2 =
0.48

9. Solution: B

Let M = event that customer insures more than one car and S = event that customer insurers a
sports car. Then applying DeMorgan’s Law, compute the desired probability as:
(
Pr M c ∩ S c = )
Pr ( M ∪ S )  =

c

1 − Pr ( M ∪ S ) =
1 −  Pr ( M ) + Pr ( S ) − Pr ( M ∩ S ) 

1 − Pr ( M ) − Pr ( S ) + Pr ( S M ) Pr ( M ) =
= 1 − 0.70 − 0.20 + ( 0.15 )( 0.70 ) =
0.205

Page 4 of 125
10. Solution: B

Let C = Event that a policyholder buys collision coverage and D = Event that a policyholder
buys disability coverage. Then we are given= that P[C ] 2 P[ D] and=
P[C ∩ D] 0.15 .
By the independence of C and D,
0.15 = [C ∩ D] = P[C ]P[ D] = 2 P[ D]2
= =
P[ D]2 0.15 / 2 0.075
= P[ D] =0.075, P[C ] 2 0.075.
Independence of C and D implies independence of Cc and Dc. Then
P[C c ∩ D c ] =P[C c ]P[ D c ] =(1 − 2 0.075)(1 − 0.075) =0.33.

11. Solution: E

“Boxed” numbers in the table below were computed.


High BP Low BP Norm BP Total
Regular heartbeat 0.09 0.20 0.56 0.85
Irregular heartbeat 0.05 0.02 0.08 0.15
Total 0.14 0.22 0.64 1.00
From the table, 20% of patients have a regular heartbeat and low blood pressure.

12. Solution: C

Let x be the probability of having all three risk factors.


1 P[ A ∩ B ∩ C] x
= P [ A ∩ B ∩ C | A ∩ B= ] =
3 P [ A ∩ B] x + 0.12
It follows that
1 1
x =( x + 0.12 ) = x + 0.04
3 3
2
x = 0.04
3
x = 0.06
Now we want to find
P ( A ∪ B ∪ C ) 
c

P ( A ∪ B ∪ C ) | Ac  =  
c
  
P A c

1− P[ A ∪ B ∪ C]
=
1 − P [ A]
1 − 3 ( 0.10 ) − 3 ( 0.12 ) − 0.06
=
1 − 0.10 − 2 ( 0.12 ) − 0.06
0.28
= = 0.467
0.60

Page 5 of 125
13. Solution: A

k
1 11 111 1
p=
k pk −=
1 pk −=
2 pk −=
3 =   p0
 k ≥0
5 55 555 5
∞ ∞ k
1 p0 5
1=
=1 ∑=
pk ∑  =
k 05
p0 =
1 4
p0=, p0 4 / 5
= k 0=
1−
5
Therefore, P[N > 1] = 1 – P[N ≤1] = 1 – (4/5 + 4/5 x 1/5) = 1 – 24/25 = 1/25 = 0.04 .

14. Solution: C

Let x be the probability of choosing A and B, but not C, y the probability of choosing A and C,
but not B, z the probability of choosing B and C, but not A.

We want to find w = 1 – (x + y + z).


We have x + y = 1/4, x + z = 1/3, y + z = 5/12.
Adding these three equations gives
1 1 5
( x + y) + ( x + z) + ( y + z) = + +
4 3 12
2( x + y + z) = 1
1
x+ y+z =
2
1 1
w =1 − ( x + y + z ) =1 − = .
2 2
Alternatively the three equations can be solved to give x = 1/12, y = 1/6, z =1/4 again leading to
 1 1 1 1
w =1 −  + +  =
 12 6 4  2

15. Solution: D

Let N1 and N2 denote the number of claims during weeks one and two, respectively. Then since
they are independent,
P [ N1 + N 2 =7 ] =∑ n =0 P [ N1 =n ] Pr [ N 2 =7 − n ]
7

7  1  1 
= ∑ n =0  n +1   8− n 
 2  2 
1
= ∑ n =0 9
7

2
8 1 1
= = 9
=6
2 2 64

Page 6 of 125
16. Solution: D

Let O = event of operating room charges and E = event of emergency room charges. Then
0.85= P ( O ∪ E )= P ( O ) + P ( E ) − P ( O ∩ E )
= P (O ) + P ( E ) − P (O ) P ( E ) ( Independence )
Because P E =
c
( )1 − P ( E ) , P( E ) =
0.25 = 0.75 ,
0.85 = P ( O ) + 0.75 − P ( O )( 0.75 )
P(O)(1 − 0.75) = 0.85 − 0.75 = 0.10
= =
P(O) 0.10 / 0.25 0.40.

17. Solution: D

Let X1 and X2 denote the measurement errors of the less and more accurate instruments,
respectively. If N ( µ , σ ) denotes a normal random variable then
X 1  N (0, 0.0056h), X 2  N (0, 0044h) and they are independent. It follows that
X1 + X 2 0.00562 h 2 + 0.00442 h 2
Y =  N (0, 0.00356h) . Therefore,
2 4
 0.005h − 0 0.005h − 0 
P (−0.005h ≤ Y ≤ 0.005h) = P  − ≤Z≤ 
 0.00356h 0.00356h 
= P (−1.4 ≤ Z ≤ 1.4) = P ( Z ≤ 1.4) − [1 − P( Z ≤ 1.4)] = 2(0.9192) − 1 = 0.84.

18. Solution: B

Apply Bayes’ Formula. Let


A = Event of an accident
B1 = Event the driver’s age is in the range 16-20
B2 = Event the driver’s age is in the range 21-30
B3 = Event the driver’s age is in the range 30-65
B4 = Event the driver’s age is in the range 66-99
Then
P ( A B1 ) P ( B1 )
P ( B1 A ) =
P ( A B1 ) P ( B1 ) + P ( A B2 ) P ( B2 ) + P ( A B3 ) P ( B3 ) + P ( A B4 ) P ( B4 )

= 0.1584
( 0.06 )( 0.08)
( 0.06 )( 0.08) + ( 0.03)( 0.15) + ( 0.02 )( 0.49 ) + ( 0.04 )( 0.28)

Page 7 of 125
19. Solution: D

Let
S = Event of a standard policy
F = Event of a preferred policy
U = Event of an ultra-preferred policy
D = Event that a policyholder dies
Then
P [ D | U ] P [U ]
P [U | D ] =
P [ D | S ] P [ S ] + P [ D | F ] P [ F ] + P [ D | U ] P [U ]

=
( 0.001)( 0.10 )
( 0.01)( 0.50 ) + ( 0.005)( 0.40 ) + ( 0.001)( 0.10 )
= 0.0141

20. Solution: B

P Seri. Surv.
P Surv. Seri. P [Seri.]
=
P Surv. Crit. P [ Crit.] + P Surv. Seri. P [Seri.] + P Surv. Stab. P [Stab.]

= 0.29
( 0.9 )( 0.3)
( 0.6 )( 0.1) + ( 0.9 )( 0.3) + ( 0.99 )( 0.6 )
21. Solution: D

Let H = heavy smoker, L = light smoker, N = non-smoker, D = death within five-year period.
1
We= are given that P[ D | L] 2= P[ D | N ] and P[ D | L] P[ D | H ]
2
Therefore,
P  D H  P [ H ]
P  H D  =
P  D N  P [ N ] + P  D L  P [ L ] + P  D H  P [ H ]
2 P  D L  ( 0.2 ) 0.4
= = = 0.42
P  D L  ( 0.5 ) + P  D L  ( 0.3) + 2 P  D L  ( 0.2 ) 0.25 + 0.3 + 0.4
1
2

Page 8 of 125
22. Solution: D

Let
C = Event of a collision
T = Event of a teen driver
Y = Event of a young adult driver
M = Event of a midlife driver
S = Event of a senior driver
Then,
P[C Y ]P[Y ]
P[Y | C ] =
P[C T ]P[T ] + P[C Y ]P[Y ] + P[C M ]P[ M ] + P[C S ]P[ S ]
(0.08)(0.16)
= 0.22.
(0.15)(0.08) + (0.08)(0.16) + (0.04)(0.45) + (0.05)(0.31)

23. Solution: B

P [1 ≤ N ≤ 4] 1 1 1 1  1 1 1 1 1
P  N ≥ 1 N ≤ 4  = = + + +   + + + + 
P [ N ≤ 4]  6 12 20 30   2 6 12 20 30 
10 + 5 + 3 + 2 20 2
= = =
30 + 10 + 5 + 3 + 2 50 5

24. Solution: B

Let Y = positive test result


D = disease is present
Then,
P[Y | D]P[ D] (0.95)(0.01)
P[ D | Y ] = = 0.657.
P[Y | D]P[ D] + P[Y | D ]P[ D ] (0.95)(0.01) + (0.005)(0.99)
c c

25. Solution: C

Let:
S = Event of a smoker
C = Event of a circulation problem
Then we are given that P[C] = 0.25 and P[SC] = 2 P[SCc]
Then,,
P[ S | C ]P[C ]
P[C | S ] =
P[ S | C ]P[C ] + P[ S | C c ]P[C c ]
2 P[ S | C c ]P[C ] 2(0.25) 2 2
= = = =
2 P[ S | C ]P[C ] + P[ S | C ](1 − P[C ]) 2(0.25) + 0.75 2 + 3 5
c c

Page 9 of 125
26. Solution: D

Let B, C, and D be the events of an accident occurring in 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively.
Let A = B ∪ C ∪ D .
P[ A B]P[ B]
P[ B | A] =
P[ A B][ P[ B] + P[ A C ]P[C ] + P[ A D]P[ D]
Use Bayes’ Theorem
(0.05)(0.16)
= = 0.45.
(0.05)(0.16) + (0.02)(0.18) + (0.03)(0.20)

27. Solution: A

Let
C = Event that shipment came from Company X
I = Event that one of the vaccine vials tested is ineffective
P [ I | C ] P [C ]
Then, P [C | I ] = .
P [ I | C ] P [C ] + P  I | C c  P C c 
Now
1
P [C ] =
5
1 4
P C c  =1 − P [C ] =1 − =
5 5
=P[I | C] (=) ( 0.10 )( 0.90 ) 0.141
30
1
29

P  I | C  (=
= ) ( 0.02 )( 0.98) 0.334
c 30 29
1

Therefore,
P [C | I ]
( 0.141)(1/ 5)
= 0.096 .
( 0.141)(1/ 5) + ( 0.334 )( 4 / 5)
28. Solution: C

Let T denote the number of days that elapse before a high-risk driver is involved in an accident.
Then T is exponentially distributed with unknown parameter λ. We are given that
50

∫ λ e dt =
− λt
0.3 =
P[T ≤ 50] = −e − λ t 50
1 − e −50 λ .
=
0
0

Therefore, e =50 λ = 0.7 and λ = −(1/ 50) ln(0.7).


Then,
80

∫ λe dt =
− λt
P[T ≤ 80] = −e − λ t 80
1 − e −80 λ
=
0
0 = 1 – e–80λ
=
1 − e(80/50)ln(0.7) =
1 − 0.78/5 =
0.435.

Page 10 of 125
29. Solution: D

e−λ λ 2 e−λ λ 4
Let N be the number of claims filed. We are given P[ N= 2]= = 3P[ N= 4]
= 3 .
2! 4!
Then,
1 2 3 4
= λ λ =or λ 2 4=or λ 2 , which is the variance of N.
2 24

30. Solution: D

Let X denote the number of employees who achieve the high performance level. Then X follows
a binomial distribution with parameters n = 20 and p = 0.02. Now we want to determine x such
that P[X > x] < 0.01 or equivalently 0.99 ≤ P [ X ≤ x ] =
∑ k =0
x
( ) ( 0.02 ) ( 0.98)
20
k
k 20 − k

The first three probabilities (at 0, 1, and 2) are 0.668, 0.272, and 0.053. The total is 0.993 and so
the smallest x that has the probability exceed 0.99 is 2. Thus C = 120/2 = 60.

31. Solution: D

Let
X = number of low-risk drivers insured
Y = number of moderate-risk drivers insured
Z = number of high-risk drivers insured
f(x, y, z) = probability function of X, Y, and Z
Then f is a trinomial probability function, so
P [ z ≥ x + 2] = f ( 0, 0, 4 ) + f (1, 0,3) + f ( 0,1,3) + f ( 0, 2, 2 )
4!
( 0.20 ) + 4 ( 0.50 )( 0.20 ) + 4 ( 0.30 )( 0.20 ) +
= ( 0.30 ) ( 0.20 )
4 3 3 2 2

2!2!
= 0.0488

32. Solution: B

 1 
P [ X=
> x] 0.005 ( 20 =
− t ) dt 0.005  20t − t 2  20
20
∫ x
 2 
x

 1 2  1 
= 0.005  400 − 200 − 20 x + = x  0.005  200 − 20 x + x 2 
 2   2 
where 0 < x < 20. Therefore,
P [ X > 16] 200 − 20 (16 ) + 1 2 (16 )
2
8 1
P  X > 16 X > 8=
 = = = .
P [ X > 8] 200 − 20 ( 8 ) + 1 ( 8 )
2
72 9
2

Page 11 of 125
33. Solution: C

We know the density has the form C (10 + x ) for 0 < x < 40 (equals zero otherwise). First,
−2

determine the proportionality constant C.


40
C C 2
( )
40 −2
∫0
−1
1= C 10 + x dx =− C (10 + x ) =− = C
0 10 50 25
So C = 25/2 or 12.5. Then, calculate the probability over the interval (0, 6):
−1 6  1 1
12.5∫ (10 + x ) dx = −12.5 (10 + x )
6 −2
=12.5  −  = 0.47 .
0 0  10 16 

34. Solution: B

To determine k,
1
k k
1 = 1=∫0 k (1 − y ) dy =
− (1 − y ) 1 =
4 5
, so k = 5
5 0 5
We next need to find P[V > 10,000] = P[100,000 Y > 10,000] = P[Y > 0.1], which is
1

∫ 5 (1 − y ) dy =− (1 − y ) =0.95 =
4 5 1
0.59 and P[V > 40,000] which is
0.1
0.1
1

∫ 5 (1 − y ) dy =− (1 − y ) =0.65 =
4 5 1
0.078 . Then,
0.4
0.4

P[V > 40, 000 ∩ V > 10, 000] P[V > 40, 000] 0.078
P[V > 40, 000 | V > 10, 000] = = = =0.132.
P[V > 10, 000] P[V > 10, 000] 0.590

35. Solution: D

Let Τ denote printer lifetime. The distribution function is F (t ) = 1 − e − t /2 . The probability of


failure in the first year is F(1) = 0.3935 and the probability of failure in the second year is F(2) –
F(1) = 0.6321 – 0.3935 = 0.2386. Of 100 printers, the expected number of failures is 39.35 and
23.86 for the two periods. The total expected cost is 200(39.35) + 100(23.86) = 10,256.

36. Solution: A

x
∫ 3t dt =
−4 x
The distribution function is F ( x) =P[ X ≤ x] = −t −3 =
1 − x −3 . Then,
1 1

P [ ( X < 2) and ( X ≥ 1.5) ] P[ X < 2] − Pr[X < 1.5]


=
P[ X < 2 | X ≥ 1.5] =
P [ X ≥ 1.5] Pr [ X ≥ 1.5]
F (2) − F (1.5) (1 − 2−3 ) − (1 − 1.5−3 ) −1/ 8 + 8 / 27 37
= = −3
= = = 0.578
1 − F (1.5) 1 − (1 − 1.5 ) 8 / 27 64

Page 12 of 125
37. Solution: E

The number of hurricanes has a binomial distribution with n = 20 and p = 0.05. Then
P[ X < =
3] 0.9520 + 20(0.95)19 (0.05) + 190(0.95)18 (0.05)=
2
0.9245.

38. Solution: B

Denote the insurance payment by the random variable Y. Then


0 if 0< X ≤C
Y =
X − C if C < X <1
We are given that
0.5 + C 0.5 + C
0.64 = P[Y < 0.5] = P[0 < X < 0.5 + C ] = ∫ 0
2 x dx = x 2
0
= (0.5 + C ) 2 .

The quadratic equation has roots at C = 0.3 and –1.3. Because C must be between 0 and 1, the
solution is C = 0.3.

39. Solution: E

The number completing the study in a single group is binomial (10,0.8). For a single group the
probability that at least nine complete the study is ( 10
9 ) ( 0.8 ) ( 0.2 ) + ( 10 ) ( 0.8 ) =
9 10 10
0.376
The probability that this happens for one group but not the other is 0.376(0.624) + 0.624(0.376)
= 0.469.

40. Solution: D

There are two situations where Company B’s total exceeds Company A’s. First, Company B has
at least one claim and Company A has no claims. This probability is 0.3(0.6) = 0.18. Second,
both have claims. This probability is 0.3(0.4) = 0.12. Given that both have claims, the
distribution of B’s claims minus A’s claims is normal with mean 9,000 – 10,000 = –1,000 and
standard deviation 2, 0002 + 2, 0002 = 2,828.43. The probability that the difference exceeds
0 − (−1, 000)
zero is the probability that a standard normal variable exceeds = 0.354. The
2,828.43
probability is 1 – 0.638 = 0.362. The probability of the desired event is 0.18 + 0.12(0.362) =
0.223.

Page 13 of 125
41. Solution: D

One way to view this event is that in the first seven months there must be at least four with no
accidents. These are binomial probabilities:
() 3 7
() 5 2 7 6
()
4 0.4 0.6 + 5 0.4 0.6 + 6 0.4 0.6 + 7 0.4
7 4 7 7
()
= 0.1935 + 0.0774 + 0.0172 + 0.0016 = 0.2897.

Alternatively, consider a negative binomial distribution where K is the number of failures before
the fourth success (no accidents). Then
P[ K < 4]= 0.44 + ( 14 ) 0.44 0.6 + ( 52 ) 0.44 0.62 + ( 36 ) 0.44 0.63 = 0.2898

42. Solution: C

The probabilities of 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 days of hospitalization are 5/15, 4/15, 3/15, 2/15, and 1/15
respectively. The payments are 100, 200, 300, 350, and 400 respectively. The expected value is
[100(5) + 200(4) + 300(3) + 350(2) + 400(1)]/15 = 220.

43. Solution: D
0 4
−x x x3 x3 8 64 56 28
E(X ) =
0 4
∫ −2 x 10 dx + ∫0 x 10 dx =
− +
30 −2 30 0
=
− + ==
30 30 30 15

44. Solution: D

The density function of T is


1 − t /3
= f (t ) e , 0 <t <∞
3
Therefore,
2 − t /3 ∞ t
E [ X ] E  max (T , 2 )
2
= = ∫0 3
e dt + ∫ e − t /3 dt
2 3


=−2e − t /3 | 20 −te − t /3 | ∞2 + ∫ e − t /3 dt =−2e −2/3 + 2 + 2e −2/3 − 3e − t /3 | ∞2
2

= 2 + 3e −2/3
Alternatively, with probability 1 − e −2/3 the device fails in the first two years and contributes 2 to
the expected value. With the remaining probability the expected value is 2 + 3 = 5 (employing
the memoryless property). The unconditional expected value is (1 − e −2/3 )2 + (e −2/3 )5 = 2 + 3e −2/3 .

Page 14 of 125
45. Solution: D

We want to find x such that


1 3
x –t/10 x 1 –t/10
1000 = E[P] = ∫
0
10
e dt + ∫1 2 10 e dt =
1 3
=1000 ∫0
x(0.1) e − t /10 dt + ∫ 0.5 x(0.1)e − t /10 dt
1

− t /10 1 3
=
− xe −0.5 xe − t /10
0 1
−1/10 −3/10
=− xe + x − 0.5 xe + 0.5 xe −1/10 =0.1772 x.
Thus x = 5644.

46. Solution: E

E[Y ] = 4000(0.4) + 3000(0.6)(0.4) + 2000(0.6) 2 (0.4) + 1000(0.6)3 (0.4)


= 2694

47. Solution: C

The expected payment is



(3 / 2) n e −3/2  ∞ (3 / 2) n e −3/2 
∑ 10, 000( n − 1) = ∑ 10, 000( n − 1)  − 10, 000(−1)e
−3/2

n 1= n ! n 0 n ! 
= 10, 000(1.5 − 1) + 10, 000
= e −3/2 7, 231.

48. Solution: C

The expected payment is


 2.5(0.6) 2.5  ∞
 2.5(0.6) 2.5   −1.5 2
− x −2.5 

2.5 − x
2

∫  x3.5  ∫2  x3.5 
x
0.6 
dx + 2 dx = 2.5(0.6) 
 1.5
+
2.5 2 

 0.6 
 −2 −1.5
0.6 −1.5
2 
−2.5
= 2.5(0.6) 2.5  + =
+2  0.9343.
 1.5 1.5 2.5 

Page 15 of 125
49. Solution: A

First, determine K.
 1 1 1 1  60 + 30 + 20 + 15 + 12   137 
1= K 1 + + + + = K  = K  
 2 3 4 5  60   60 
60
K=
137
Then, after applying the deductible, the expected payment is
0.05[(3 − 2) P ( N =
3) + (4 − 2) P ( N = 4) + (5 − 2) P ( N =5)]
= 0.05(60 /137)[1(1/ 3) + 2(1/= 4) + 3(1/ 5)] 0.0314

50. Solution: D

The expected payment is


10 ∞ 10 ∞
2 2 2 20 2 2 20

1
y 3 dy + ∫ 10 3 dy =−
y 10
y
− 2
y 1 2y
=− + −0+
10 1 200
=1.9.
10

51. Solution: B

The expected payment is (in thousands)


15
(0.94)(0) + (0.02)(15 − 1) + 0.04 ∫ ( x − 1)0.5003e − x /2 dx
1

= 0.28 + ( 0.020012 )  −2e − x /2 ( x − 1) + ∫ 2 e − x /2 dx 


15 15

 1 1 
= 0.28 + ( 0.020012 )  −2e −7.5 (14) + −4e − x /2 
 (
15

1   )
=0.28 + ( 0.020012 )  −2e −7.5 (14) − 4e −7.5 + 4e −0.5 
= 0.28 + ( 0.020012 )( 2.408 )
= 0.328.

52. Solution: C

∞ ∞
k k 1 k
1= ∫ dx =
− = and so k = 3.
0
(1 + x) 4
3 (1 + x) 0 3
3

The expected value is (where the substitution u = 1 + x is used.


∞ 3 ∞ ∞
∫0 x (1 + x)4 dx= ∫1 3(u − 1)u du= 3u / (−2) − 3u / (−3) 1= 3 / 2 −=1 1/ 2.
−4 −2 −3

Integration by parts may also be used.

Page 16 of 125
53. Solution: C

With no deductible, the expected payment is 500. With the deductible it is to be 125. Let d be the
deductible. Then,
1000
1000 ( x − d )2
=
125 ∫d
( x − d )(0.001)dx
=
2
(0.001) = 0.0005 (1000 − d ) 2 − 0 
d

250,=000 (1000 − d ) 2
=
500 1000 − d
d = 500.

54. Solution: B

The distribution function of X is


x
2.5(200) 2.5
x −(200) 2.5 (200) 2.5
∫ 200 t 3.5 dt =
F ( x) =
t 2.5
=
1−
x 2.5
, x > 200
200

The pth percentile xp of X is given by


p (200) 2.5
= F (xp )= 1 −
100 x 2.5
p

(200) 2.5
1 − 0.01 p =
x 2.5
p

200
(1 − 0.01 p )0.4 =
xp
200
xp =
(1 − 0.01 p )0.4
200 200
It follows that x 70 −=
x 30 0.4
− = 93.06 .
(0.30) (0.70)0.4

55. Solution: E

Let X and Y denote the annual cost of maintaining and repairing a car before and after the 20%
tax, respectively. Then Y = 1.2X and= =
Var (Y ) Var (1.2 X ) 1.44= = 374.4 .
Var ( X ) 1.44(260)

Page 17 of 125
56. Solution: C

First note that the distribution function jumps ½ at x = 1, so there is discrete probability at that
point. From 1 to 2, the density function is the derivative of the distribution function, x – 1. Then,
2
1 2 1  x3 x 2  1 8 4 1 1 4
E ( X ) = (1) + ∫ x( x − 1)dx = +  −  = + − − + =
2 1 2  3 2 1 2 3 2 3 2 3
2
1 2 1  x 4 x3  1 16 8 1 1 23
E ( X ) = (1) 2 + ∫ x 2 ( x − 1)dx = +  −  = + − − + =
2

2 1 2  4 3  1 2 4 3 4 3 12
2
23  4  23 16 5
Var ( X ) = E ( X ) − [ E ( X ) ] =
2
2
−  = − = .
12  3  12 9 36

57. Solution: C

4 5
∫ x(0.2)dx + ∫ 4(0.2)dx
4
E[Y=
] = 0.1x 2 + 0.8
= 2.4
0 4 0
4 5
∫ x 2 (0.2)dx + ∫ 42 (0.2)
4
=
E[Y 2 ] = dx (0.2 / 3) x 3 =
+ 3.2 7.46667
0 4 0

Var[Y] = E[Y ] − ( E[Y ]) = 7.46667 − 2.4 = 1.707.


2 2 2

58. Solution: A

The mean is 20(0.15) + 30(0.10) + 40(0.05) + 50(0.20) + 60(0.10) + 70(0.10) + 80(0.30) = 55.
The second moment is 400(0.15) + 900(0.10) + 1600(0.05) + 2500(0.20) + 3600(0.10) +
4900(0.10) + 6400(0.30) = 3500. The variance is 3500 – 552 = 475. The standard deviation is
21.79. The range within one standard deviation of the mean is 33.21 to 76.79, which includes the
values 40, 50, 60, and 70. The sum of the probabilities for those values is 0.05 + 0.20 + 0.10 +
0.10 = 0.45.

59. Solution: B

Let Y be the amount of the insurance payment.


1500
1500 1 1 12502
E[Y ] =∫ ( x − 250)dx = ( x − 250) 2 = =521
250 1500 3000 3000
250
1500
1500 1 1 12503
E[Y ] =∫ ( x − 250) 2 dx = ( x − 250)3 = =
2
434, 028
250 1500 4500 250 4500
Var[Y]= 434, 028 − (521) 2 = 162,587
SD[Y ] = 403.

Page 18 of 125
60. Solution: B

The expected amount paid is (where N is the number of consecutive days of rain)
e −0.6 0.6
1000 P[ N = 1] + 2000 P[ N > 1] = 1000 + 2000 (1 − e −0.6 − e −0.6 0.6 ) = 573.
1!
The second moment is
e −0.6 0.6
10002 P[ N = 1] + 20002 P[ N > 1] = 10002 + 20002 (1 − e −0.6 − e −0.6 0.6 ) = 816,893.
1!
2
The variance is 816,893 – 573 = 488,564 and the standard deviation is 699.

61. Solution: C

X has an exponential distribution. Therefore, c = 0.004 and the distribution function is


F ( x) = 1 − e −0.004 x . For the moment, ignore the maximum benefit. The median is the solution to
0.5 = F (m) = 1 − e −0.004 m , which is m = −250 ln(0.5) =
173.29. Because this is below the
maximum benefit, it is the median regardless of the existence of the maximum. Note that had the
question asked for a percentile such that the solution without the maximum exceeds 250, then the
answer is 250.

62. Solution: D

The distribution function of an exponential random variable, T, is F (t ) = 1 − e − t θ , t > 0 . With a


median of four hours, 0.5 = F (4) = 1 − e −4/θ and so θ = −4 / ln(0.5) . The probability the
component works for at least five hours is P[T ≥ 5] = 1 − F (5) = 1 − 1 + e5ln(0.5)/4 = 0.55/4 = 0.42.

63. Solution: E

This is a conditional probability. The solution is


P[100 ≤ X ≤ p ] F ( p ) − F (100)
0.95 = P[ X ≤ p | X > 100] = =
P[ X > 100] 1 − F (100)
1 − e − p /300 − 1 + e −100/300 e −100/300 − e − p /300
= = = 1 − e − ( p −100)/300
1 − 1 + e −100/300 e −100/300
0.05 = e − ( p −100)/300
−2.9957 = −( p − 100) / 300
p = 999

Page 19 of 125
64. Solution: A

The distribution function of X is given by


x 3
∫1 t 4
−3 x
F ( x) = dt =−t 1 − x −3 , x > 1
=
1

Next, let X1, X2, and X3 denote the three claims made that have this distribution. Then if Y
denotes the largest of these three claims, it follows that the distribution function of Y is given by
G ( y ) =P[ X 1 ≤ y ]P[ X 2 ≤ y ]P[ X 3 ≤ y ] =(1 − y −3 )3 .
The density function of Y is given by
) G′( y=
g ( y= ) 3(1 − y −3 ) 2 (3 y −4 ).
Therefore,
∞ ∞
E[Y ]= ∫1
y3(1 − y −3 ) 2 3 y −4 dy= 9 ∫ y −3 − 2 y −6 + y −9 dy
1

=9  − y −2 / 2 + 2 y −5 / 5 − y −8 / 8  =9 [1/ 2 − 2 / 5 + 1/ 8]

 1 

= 2.025 (in thousands).

65. Solution: C

The mean and standard deviation for the 2025 contributions are 2025(3125) = 6,328,125 and
45(250) = 11,250. By the central limit theorem, the total contributions are approximately
normally distributed. The 90th percentile is the mean plus 1.282 standard deviations or 6,328,125
+ 1.282(11,250) = 6,342,548.

66. Solution: C

The average has the same mean as a single claim, 19,400. The standard deviation is that for a
single claim divided by the square root of the sample size, 5,000/5 = 1,000. The probability of
exceeding 20,000 is the probability that a standard normal variable exceeds (20,000 –
19,400)/1,000 = 0.6. From the tables, this is 1 – 0.7257 = 0.2743.

67. Solution: B

A single policy has a mean and variance of 2 claims. For 1250 polices the mean and variance of
the total are both 2500. The standard deviation is the square root, or 50.
The approximate probability of being between 2450 and 2600 is the same as a standard normal
random variable being between (2450 – 2500)/50 = –1 and (2600 – 2500)/50 = 2. From the
tables, the probability is 0.9772 – (1 – 0.8413) = 0.8185.

Page 20 of 125
68. Solution: B

Let n be the number of bulbs purchased. The mean lifetime is 3n and the variance is n. From the
normal tables, a probability of 0.9772 is 2 standard deviations below the mean. Hence 40 = 3n –
2sqrt(n). Let m be the square root of n. The quadratic equation is 3m2 – 2m – 40. The roots are 4
and –10/3. So n is either 16 or 100/9. At 16 the mean is 48 and the standard deviation is 4, which
works. At 100/9 the mean is 100/3 and the standard deviation is 10/3. In this case 40 is two
standard deviations above the mean, and so is not appropriate. Thus 16 is the correct choice.

69. Solution: B

Observe that (where Z is total hours for a randomly selected person)


E[ Z ] = E[ X + Y ] = E[ X ] + E[Y ] = 50 + 20 = 70
Var[ Z ] = Var[ X + Y ] = Var[ X ] + Var[Y ] + 2Cov[ X , Y ] = 50 + 30 + 20 = 100.
It then follows from the Central Limit Theorem that T is approximately normal with mean
100(70) = 7000 and variance 100(100) = 10,000 and standard deviation 100. The probability of
being less than 7100 is the probability that a standard normal variable is less than (7100 –
7000)/100 = 1. From the tables, this is 0.8413.

70. Solution: B

A single policy has an exponential distribution with mean and standard deviation 1000. The
premium is then 1000 + 100 = 1100. For 100 policies, the total claims have mean 100(1000) =
100,000 and standard deviation 10(1000) = 10,000. Total premiums are 100(1100) = 110,000.
The probability of exceeding this number is the probability that a standard normal variable
exceeds (110,000 – 100,000)/10,000 = 1. From the tables this probability is 1 – 0.8413 = 0.1587.

71. Solution: E

For a single recruit, the probability of 0 pensions is 0.6, of 1 pension is 0.4(0.25) = 0.1, and of 2
pensions is 0.4(0.75) = 0.3. The expected number of pensions is 0(0.6) + 1(0.1) + 2(0.3) = 0.7.
The second moment is 0(0.6) + 1(0.1) + 4(0.3) = 1.3. The variance is 1.3 – 0.49 = 0.81. For 100
recruits the mean is 70 and the variance is 81. The probability of providing at most 90 pensions
is (with a continuity correction) the probability of being below 90.5. This is (90.5 – 70)/9 = 2.28
standard deviations above the mean. From the tables, this probability is 0.9887.

72. Solution: D

For one observation, the mean is 0 and the variance is 25/12 (for a uniform distribution the
variance is the square of the range divided by 12). For 48 observations, the average has a mean
of 0 and a variance of (25/12)/48 = 0.0434. The standard deviation is 0.2083. 0.25 years is
0.25/0.2083 = 1.2 standard deviations from the mean. From the normal tables the probability of
being within 1.2 standard deviations is 0.8849 – (1 – 0.8849) = 0.7698.

Page 21 of 125
73. Solution: C

For a good driver, the probability is 1 − e −3/6 and for a bad driver, the probability is 1 − e −2/3 . The
probability of both is the product, (1 − e −3/6 )(1 − e −2/3 ) =
1 − e −1/2 − e −2/3 + e −7/6 .

74. Solution: E

The tour operator collects 21x50 = 1050 for the 21 tickets sold. The probability that all 21
passengers will show up is (1 − 0.02 ) = ( 0.98) = 0.65 . Therefore, the tour operator’s expected
21 21

revenue is 1050 – 100(065) = 985.

75. Solution: C

First obtain the covariance of the two variables as (17,000 – 5,000 – 10,000)/2 = 1,000.
The requested variance is
Var ( X + 100 + 1.1Y=) Var ( X ) + Var (1.1Y ) + 2Cov( X ,1.1Y )
=Var ( X ) + 1.21Var (Y ) + 2(1.1)Cov( X , Y )
= 5, 000 + 1.21(10, 000) + 2.2(1, 000) = 19,300.

76. Solution: B

P(X = 0) = 1/6
P(X = 1) = 1/12 + 1/6 = 3/12
P(X = 2) = 1/12 + 1/3 + 1/6 = 7/12 .
E[X] = (0)(1/6) + (1)(3/12) + (2)(7/12) = 17/12
E[X2] = (0)2(1/6) + (1)2(3/12) + (2)2(7/12) = 31/12
Var[X] = 31/12 – (17/12)2 = 0.58.

77. Solution: D

Due to the independence of X and Y


Var ( Z=
) Var (3 X − Y − 5)
= 32 Var ( X ) + (−1) 2 Var (Y=
) 9(1) + =
2 11.

78. Solution: E

Let X and Y denote the times that the generators can operate. Now the variance of an exponential
random variable is the square of them mean, so each generator has a variance of 100. Because
they are independent, the variance of the sum is 200.

79. Solution: E

Let S, F, and T be the losses due to storm, fire, and theft respectively. Let Y = max(S,F,T). Then,
P[Y > 3] =1 − P[Y ≤ 3] =1 − P[max( S , F , T ) ≤ 3] =1 − P[ S ≤ 3]P[ F ≤ 3]P[T ≤ 3]
=1 − (1 − e −3/1 )(1 − e −3/1.5 )(1 − e −3/2.4 ) =0.414.

Page 22 of 125
80. Solution: A

First obtain Var(X) = 27.4 – 25 = 2.4, Var(Y) = 51.4 – 49 = 2.4, Cov(X,Y) = (8 – 2.4 – 2.4)/2 =
1.6. Then,
Cov(C1 , C2 )= Cov( X + Y , X + 1.2Y )= Cov( X , X ) + 1.2Cov( X , Y ) + Cov(Y , X ) + 1.2Cov(Y , Y )
=
Var ( X ) + 1.2Var (Y ) + 2.2Cov( X , Y )
=+
2.4 1.2(2.4) + 2.2(1.6) =
8.8.

81. Solution: E

Because the husband has survived, the only possible claim payment is to the wife. So we need
the probability that the wife dies within ten years given that the husband survives. The numerator
of the conditional probability is the unique event that only the husband survives, with probability
0.01. The denominator is the sum of two events, both survive (0.96) and only the husband
survives (0.01). The conditional probability is 0.01/(0.96 + 0.01) = 1/97. The expected claim
payment is 10,000/97 = 103 and the expected excess is 1,000 – 103 = 897.

82. Solution: C

P(=X 1,= Y 0) P(=X 1,= Y 0) 0.05


P[Y= 0 | X= 1]= = = = 0.286
P ( X =1) P ( X =1, Y =0) + P ( X =1, Y =1) 0.05 + 0.125
P[Y = 1| X = 1] =1 − 0.286 = 0.714.
The conditional variable is Bernoulli with p = 0.714. The variance is (0.714)(0.286) = 0.204.

83. Solution: D

With no tornadoes in County P the probabilities of 0, 1, 2, and 3 tornadoes in County Q are


12/25, 6/25, 5/25, and 2/25 respectively.
The mean is (0 + 6 + 10 + 6)/25 = 22/25.
The second moment is (0 + 6 + 20 + 18)/25 = 44/25.
The variance is 44/25 – (22/25)2 = 0.9856.

84. Solution: C

From the Law of Total Probability:


P[4 < S < 8] = P[4 < S < 8 | N = 1]P[ N = 1] + P[4 < S < 8 | N > 1]P[ N > 1]
= (e −4/5 − e −8/5 )(1/ 3) + (e −4/8 − e −8/8 )(1/ 6) = 0.122.

Page 23 of 125
85. Solution: C

Due to the equal spacing of probabilities, p= n p0 − nc for c = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Also,


0.4 = p0 + p1 = p0 + p0 − c = 2 p0 − c. Because the probabilities must sum to 1,
1 = p0 + p0 − c + p0 − 2c + p0 − 3c + p0 − 4c + p0 − 5c = 6 p0 − 15c. This provides two equations in
two unknowns. Multiplying the first equation by 15 gives = 6 30 p0 − 15c. Subtracting the second
equation gives 5= 24 p0 ⇒ p0= 5 / 24 . Inserting this in the first equation gives c = 1/60. The
requested probability is p4 + p5= 5 / 24 − 4 / 60 + 5 / 24 − 5 / 60= 32 /120= 0.267.

86. Solution: D

Because the number of payouts (including payouts of zero when the loss is below the deductible)
is large, apply the central limit theorem and assume the total payout S is normal. For one loss, the
mean, second moment, and variance of the payout are
20,000
5,000 1 20,000 1 ( x − 5, 000) 2
∫0
0
20, 000
dx + ∫
5,000
( x − 5, 000)
20, 000
=
0+
40, 000
=
5, 625
5,000
20,000
5,000 1 20,000 1 ( x − 5, 000)3
∫ dx + ∫ ( x − 5, 000) 2 =
0+ =
2
0 56, 250, 000
0 20, 000 5,000 20, 000 60, 000 5,000

56, 250, 000 − 5, 6252 =


24, 609,375.
For 200 losses the mean, variance, and standard deviation are 1,125,000, 4,921,875,000, and
70,156. 1,000,000 is 125,000/70,156 = 1.7817 standard deviations below the mean and
1,200,000 is 75,000/70,156 = 1.0690 standard deviations above the mean. From the standard
normal tables, the probability of being between these values is 0.8575 – (1 – 0.9626) = 0.8201.

87. Solution: B

Let H be the percentage of clients with homeowners insurance and R be the percentage of clients
with renters insurance.

Because 36% of clients do not have auto insurance and none have both homeowners and renters
insurance, we calculate that 8% (36% – 17% – 11%) must have renters insurance, but not auto
insurance.

(H – 11)% have both homeowners and auto insurance, (R – 8)% have both renters and auto
insurance, and none have both homeowners and renters insurance, so (H + R – 19)% must equal
35%. Because H = 2R, R must be 18%, which implies that 10% have both renters and auto
insurance.

Page 24 of 125
88. Solution: B

Let Y be the reimbursement. Then, G(115) = P[Y < 115 | X > 20]. For Y to be 115, the costs must
be above 120 (up to 120 accounts for a reimbursement of 100). The extra 15 requires 30 in
additional costs. Therefore, we need
P[ X ≤ 150] − P[ X ≤ 20] 1 − e −150/100 − 1 + e −20/100
P=[ X ≤ 150 | X > 20] =
P[ X > 20] 1 − 1 + e −20/100
−e −1.5 + −0.2
= −0,2 1 − e −1.3 =
= 0.727.
e

89. Solution: E

The conditional probability function given 2 claims in April is


3 1 −2 3e −2 1 3
∑ n2 =1 4 4
∞ −2 n2 −1
p= (2) e (1 − e = ) = −2
16 1 − (1 − e ) 16
N1

p (2, n ) 3 1 −2 16
p(n2 | N1 =2) =2 = e (1 − e −2 ) n2 −1 = e −2 (1 − e −2 ) n2 −1.
pN1 (2) 4 4 3

This can be recognized as a geometric probability function and so the mean is 1/ e −2 = e 2 .

90. Solution: C

The number of defective modems is 20% x 30 + 8% x 50 = 10.


10  70 
  
The probability that exactly two of a random sample of five are defective is    = 0.102 .
2 3
 80 
 
5
91. Solution: B

P(40 year old man dies before age 50) = P(T < 50 | T > 40)
Pr(40 < T < 50) F (50) − F (40)
=
Pr(T > 40) 1 − F (40)
 1 − 1.150   1 − 1.140   1 − 1.140   1 − 1.150 
1 − exp   − 1 + exp   exp   − exp  
=  1000   1000   1000   1000 
 1 − 1.140   1 − 1.140 
1 − 1 + exp   exp  
 1000   1000 
0.9567 − 0.8901
= 0.0696
0.9567

Expected Benefit = 5000(0.0696) = 348.

Page 25 of 125
92. Solution: C

Letting t denote the relative frequency with which twin-sized mattresses are sold, we have that
the relative frequency with which king-sized mattresses are sold is 3t and the relative frequency
with which queen-sized mattresses are sold is (3t+t)/4, or t. Thus, t = 0.2 since t + 3t + t = 1. The
probability we seek is 3t + t = 0.80.

93. Solution: E

Var ( N ) =E[Var ( N | λ )] + Var[ E ( N | λ )] =E[λ ] + Var (λ ) =1.5 + 0.75 =2.25. The variance of a
uniform random variable is the square of the range divided by 12, in this case 32/12 = 0.75.

94. Solution: D

X follows a geometric distribution with p = 1/6 and Y = 2 implies the first roll is not a 6 and the
second roll is a 6. This means a 5 is obtained for the first time on the first roll (probability = 0.2)
or a 5 is obtained for the first time on the third or later roll (probability = 0.8).

1
E[ X | X ≥ 3] = + 2 = 6 + 2 = 8. , The expected value is 0.2(1) + 0.8(8) = 6.6.
p

95. Solution: B

The unconditional probabilities for the number of people in the car who are hospitalized are 0.49,
0.42 and 0.09 for 0, 1 and 2, respectively. If the number of people hospitalized is 0 or 1, then the
total loss will be less than 1. However, if two people are hospitalized, the probability that the
total loss will be less than 1 is 0.5. Thus, the expected number of people in the car who are
hospitalized, given that the total loss due to hospitalizations from the accident is less than 1 is

0.49 0.42 0.09 ⋅ 0.5


(0) + (1) + (2) =
0.534
0.49 + 0.42 + 0.09 ⋅ 0.5 0.49 + 0.42 + 0.09 ⋅ 0.5 0.49 + 0.42 + 0.09 ⋅ 0.5

Page 26 of 125
96. Solution: B

Let X equal the number of hurricanes it takes for two losses to occur. Then X is negative
binomial with “success” probability p = 0.4 and r = 2 “successes” needed.

 n − 1 r n−r  n − 1 n−2
P[ X ==
n]   p (1 − p) =   (0.4) (1 − 0.4) =−
2
(n 1)(0.4) 2 (0.6) n − 2 , for n ≥ 2.
 r −1  2 − 1

We need to maximize P[X = n]. Note that the ratio

P[ X = n + 1] n(0.4) 2 (0.6) n −1 n
= = n−2
(0.6) .
P[ X = n] (n − 1)(0.4) (0.6)
2
n −1

This ratio of “consecutive” probabilities is greater than 1 when n = 2 and less than 1 when n ≥ 3.
Thus, P[X = n] is maximized at n = 3; the mode is 3. Alternatively, the first few probabilities
could be calculated.

97. Solution: C

There are 10 (5 choose 3) ways to select the three columns in which the three items will appear.
The row of the rightmost selected item can be chosen in any of six ways, the row of the leftmost
selected item can then be chosen in any of five ways, and the row of the middle selected item can
then be chosen in any of four ways. The answer is thus (10)(6)(5)(4) = 1200. Alternatively, there
are 30 ways to select the first item. Because there are 10 squares in the row or column of the first
selected item, there are 30 − 10 = 20 ways to select the second item. Because there are 18
squares in the rows or columns of the first and second selected items, there are 30 − 18 = 12
ways to select the third item. The number of permutations of three qualifying items is
(30)(20)(12). The number of combinations is thus (30)(20)(12)/3! = 1200.

98. Solution: B

The expected bonus for a high-risk driver is 0.8(12)(5) = 48.


The expected bonus for a low-risk driver is 0.9(12)(5) = 54.
The expected bonus payment from the insurer is 600(48) + 400(54) = 50,400.

Page 27 of 125
99. Solution: E

Liability but not property = 0.01 (given)


Liability and property = 0.04 – 0.01 = 0.03.
Property but not liability = 0.10 – 0.03 = 0.07
Probability of neither = 1 – 0.01 – 0.03 – 0.07 = 0.89

100. Solution: B

C = the set of TV watchers who watched CBS over the last year
N = the set of TV watchers who watched NBC over the last year
A = the set of TV watchers who watched ABC over the last year
H = the set of TV watchers who watched HGTV over the last year

The number of TV watchers in the set C ∪ N ∪ A is 34 + 15 + 10 – 7 – 6 – 5 + 4 = 45.

Because C ∪ N ∪ A and H are mutually exclusive, the number of TV watchers in the set
C ∪ N ∪ A ∪ H is 45 + 18 = 63.

The number of TV watchers in the complement of C ∪ N ∪ A ∪ H is thus 100 – 63 = 37.

101. Solution: A

Let X denote the amount of a claim before application of the deductible. Let Y denote the amount
of a claim payment after application of the deductible. Let λ be the mean of X, which because X
is exponential, implies that λ2 is the variance of X and E ( X 2 ) = 2λ 2 .

By the memoryless property of the exponential distribution, the conditional distribution of the
portion of a claim above the deductible given that the claim exceeds the deductible is an
exponential distribution with mean λ . Given that E (Y ) = 0.9λ , this implies that the probability of
a claim exceeding the deductible is 0.9 and thus= =
E (Y 2 ) 0.9(2λ 2 ) 1.8λ 2 . Then,
Var(Y ) = 1.8λ 2 − (0.9λ ) 2 =0.99λ 2 . The percentage reduction is 1%.

Page 28 of 125
102. Solution: C

Let N denote the number of hurricanes, which is Poisson distributed with mean and variance 4.

Let X i denote the loss due to the ith hurricane, which is exponentially distributed with mean
1,000 and therefore variance (1,000)2 = 1,000,000.

Let X denote the total loss due to the N hurricanes.

This problem can be solved using the conditional variance formula. Note that independence is
used to write the variance of a sum as the sum of the variances.

=
Var(X ) Var[ E ( X | N )] + E[Var ( X | N )]
= Var[ E ( X 1 +  + X N )] + E[Var ( X 1 +  + X N )]
= Var[ NE ( X 1 )] + E[ NVar ( X 1 )]
= Var (1, 000 N ) + E (1, 000, 000 N )
= 1, 0002 Var ( N ) + 1, 000, 000 E ( N )
= 1, 000, 000(4) + 1, 000, 000(4) = 8, 000, 000.

103. Solution: B

Let N denote the number of accidents, which is binomial with parameters 3 and 0.25 and thus has
mean 3(0.25) = 0.75 and variance 3(0.25)(0.75) = 0.5625.

Let X i denote the unreimbursed loss due to the ith accident, which is 0.3 times an exponentially
distributed random variable with mean 0.8 and therefore variance (0.8)2 = 0.64. Thus, X i has
mean 0.8(0.3) = 0.24 and variance 0.64(0.3) 2 = 0.0576 .

Let X denote the total unreimbursed loss due to the N accidents.

This problem can be solved using the conditional variance formula. Note that independence is
used to write the variance of a sum as the sum of the variances.
=
Var(X ) Var[ E ( X | N )] + E[Var ( X | N )]
= Var[ E ( X 1 +  + X N )] + E[Var ( X 1 +  + X N )]
= Var[ NE ( X 1 )] + E[ NVar ( X 1 )]
= Var (0.24 N ) + E (0.0576 N )
= 0.242 Var ( N ) + 0.0576 E ( N )
= 0.0576(0.5625) + 0.0576(0.75)= 0.0756.

Page 29 of 125
104. Solution: B

The 95th percentile is in the range when an accident occurs. It is the 75th percentile of the payout,
given that an accident occurs, because (0.95 − 0.80)/(1 − 0.80) = 0.75. Letting x be the 75th
x

percentile of the given exponential distribution, F ( x) =
1− e = 0.75 , so x = 4159. Subtracting
3000

th
the deductible of 500 gives 3659 as the (unconditional) 95 percentile of the insurance company
payout.

105. Solution: C

The ratio of the probability that one of the damaged pieces is insured to the probability that none
of the damaged pieces are insured is
 r   27 − r 
  
1   3 
 27 
 
4 =
4r
,
 r   27 − r  24 − r
  
0 4 
 27 
 
4
where r is the total number of pieces insured. Setting this ratio equal to 2 and solving yields r =
8.

The probability that two of the damaged pieces are insured is

 r   27 − r   8  19 
     
 2 2=   2 = 2 (8)(7)(19)(18)(4)(3)(2)(1) 266
= = 0.27 .
 27   27  (27)(26)(25)(24)(2)(1)(2)(1) 975
   
4 4

Page 30 of 125
106. Solution: A

The probability that Rahul examines exactly n policies is 0.1(0.9) n−1 . The probability that Toby
examines more than n policies is 0.8n . The required probability is thus

1∞ 0.72
∑ 0.1(0.9)=
n 1=
=∑
9n 1
n −1
= 0.2857 .
(0.8) n
0.72n
9 (1 − 0.72 )

An alternative solution begins by imagining Rahul and Toby examine policies simultaneously
until at least one of the finds a claim. At each examination there are four possible outcomes:
1. Both find a claim. The probability is 0.02.
2. Rahul finds a claim and Toby does not. The probability is 0.08.
3. Toby finds a claim and Rahul does not. The probability is 0.18
4. Neither finds a claim. The probability is 0.72.
Conditioning on the examination at which the process ends, the probability that it ends with
Rahul being the first to find a claim (and hence needing to examine fewer policies) is 0.08/(0.02
+ 0.08 + 0.18) = 8/28 = 0.2857.

107. Solution: E

Let a be the mean and variance of X and b be the mean and variance of Y. The two facts are a = b
– 8 and a + a2 = 0.6(b + b2). Substituting the first equation into the second gives
b − 8 + (b − 8)=
2
0.6b + 0.6b 2
b − 8 + b 2 − 16b + 64
= 0.6b + 0.6b 2
0.4b 2 − 15.6b + 56 =
0
15.6 ± 15.62 − 4(0.4)(56) 15.6 ± 12.4
=b = = 4 or 35.
2(0.4) 0.8
At b = 4, a is negative, so the answer is 35.

Page 31 of 125
108. Solution: C

Suppose there are N red sectors. Let w be the probability of a player winning the game.
Then, w = the probability of a player missing all the red sectors and
 9  9 2  9  
N

w =1 −  +   +  +   
 20  20   20  
Using the geometric series formula,
N +1 N
9  9   9 
−   1 −   N
20  20  9  20  2 9 9 
w= 1− =1− = +  
1 −
9 20 1 −
9 11 11  20 
20 20
Thus we need
N
2 9 9 
0.2 > w = +  
11 11  20 
N
 9 
2.2 > 2 + 9  
 20 
N
 9 
0.2 > 9  
 20 
N
2  9 
> 
90  20 
N
 20 
  > 45
 9 
ln(45)
N> ≈ 4.767
ln(20 / 9)
Thus N must be the first integer greater than 4.767, or 5.

109. Solution: B

The fourth moment of X is

10
10x4 x5
∫0 10
= dx = 2000.
50 0
The Y probabilities are 1/20 for Y = 0 and 10, and 1/10 for Y = 1,2,…,9.

E[Y 4 ] = (14 + 24 +  + 94 ) /10 + 104 / 20 = 2033.3.

The absolute value of the difference is 33.3.

Page 32 of 125
110. Solution: E

P( x= 1, y= 1)= P( y= 1| x= 1) P( x= 1)= 0.3(0.5) 2= 0.075


P(=
x 2, =
y 0)= P( =
y 0|=
x 2) P(=
x 2)= 0.25(0.5)=
3
0.03125
P(=
x 0, = y 2)= P( = y 2|=
x 0) P(=
x 0)= 0.05(0.5)=
1
0.025
The total is 0.13125.

111. Solution: C

∞ p −1 ∞
E ( X=
) ∫1
x
x p
=
dx ( p − 1) ∫1
x1− p dx

x 2− p p −1
( p − 1) = = 2
2− p 1 p−2
p − 1= 2( p − 2)= 2 p − 4
p=3

112. Solution: D

The distribution function plot shows that X has a point mass at 0 with probability 0.5. From 2 to
3 it has a continuous distribution. The density function is the derivative, which is the constant (1
– 0.5)/(3 – 2) = 0.5. The expected value is 0(0.5) plus the integral from 2 to 3 of 0.5x. The
integral evaluates to 1.25, which is the answer. Alternatively, this is a 50-50 mixture of a point
mass at 0 and a uniform(2,3) distribution. The mean is 0.5(0) + 0.5(2.5) = 1.25.

113. Solution: E

The dice rolls that satisfy this event are (1,1), (1,2), (1,3), (2,1), (2,2), (2,3), (2,4), (3,1), (3,2),
(3,3), (3,4), (3,5), (4,2), (4,3), (4,4), (4,5), (4,6), (5,3), (5,4), (5,5), (5,6), (6,4), (6,5), and (6,6).
They represent 24 of the 36 equally likely outcomes for a probability of 2/3.

114. Solution: D

Cov( M , N )
0.64= ρ=
Var ( M )Var ( N )
= =
Cov( M , N ) 0.64 1600(900) 768
Var ( M + N ) = Var ( M ) + Var ( N ) + 2Cov( M , N ) = 1600 + 900 + 2(768) = 4036

Page 33 of 125
115. Solution: C

6 ∞ 6 6 ∞
∫1
( x − 1)0.5e −0,5 x dx + ∫ 5(0.5)e −0.5 x dx =
6
−( x − 1)e −0.5 x + ∫ e −0.5 x dx − 5e −0.5 x
1 1 6

−0.5 x 6
=−5e −3 + 0 − 2e + 5e −3 =−2e −3 + 2e −1/2
1

116. Solution: A

Let C be the number correct. C has a binomial distribution with n = 40 and p = 0.5. Then the
mean is 40(0.5) = 20 and the variance is 40(0.5)(0.5) = 10. With the exact probability we have
 N + 0.5 − 20 
0.1 = P(C > N ) = Pr  Z > 
 10 
N + 0.5 − 20
=
1.282 ,= N 1.282 10 + 19.5= 23.55.
10
At N = 23 the approximate probability will exceed 0.1 (Z = 1.107).

117. Solution: B

The months in question have 1, 1, 0.5, 0.5, and 0.5 respectively for their means. The sum of
independent Poisson random variables is also Poisson, with the parameters added. So the total
number of accidents is Poisson with mean 3.5. The probability of two accidents is
e −3.5 3.52
= 0.185.
2!

118. Solution: B

The payments are 0 with probability 0.72 (snowfall up to 50 inches), 300 with probability 0.14,
600 with probability 0.06, and 700 with probability 0.08. The mean is 0.72(0) + 0.14(300) +
0.06(600) + 0.08(700) = 134 and the second moment is 0.72(0^2) + 0.14(300^2) + 0.06(600^2) +
0.08(700^2) = 73,400. The variance is 73,400 – 134^2 = 55,444. The standard deviation is the
square root, 235.

119. Solution: D

20

20
=1 c( x 2 − 60 x + 800)
= dx c ( x3 / 3 − 30 x 2 + 800 x=
) c 20, 000 / 3 ⇒
= c 3 / 20, 000
0 0

20 3
P( X > d ) =∫ c( x 2 − 60 x + 800)dx =c ( x3 / 3 − 30 x 2 + 800 x)
20
=−
1 (d 3 / 3 − 30d 2 + 800d )
d d 20, 000
P ( X > 10) 0.2
P ( X > 10 | X >=
2) = = 0.2572
P( X > 2) 0.7776

Page 34 of 125
120. Solution: A

Each event has probability 0.5. Each of the three possible intersections of two events has
probability 0.25 = (0.5)(0.5), so each pair is independent. The intersection of all three events has
probability 0, which does not equal (0.5)(0.5)(0.5) and so the three events are not mutually
independent.

121. Solution: C

Let event A be the selection of the die with faces (1,2,3,4,5,6), event B be the selection of the die
with faces (2,2,4,4,6,6) and event C be the selection of the die with all 6’s. The desired
probability is, using the law of total probability,
P(6, 6) = P(6, 6 | A) P( A) + P(6, 6 | B) P( B) + P(6, 6 | C ) P(C )
= (1/ 36)(1/ 2) + (1/ 9)(1/ 4) + 1(1/ 4) =1/ 72 + 2 / 72 + 18 / 72 = 21/ 72 = 0.292.

122. Solution: D

6 4 2
   
 2  =
2   2  15(6)(1)
= 0.097
12  924
 
6

123. Solution: D

Consider the three cases based on the number of claims.


If there are no claims, the probability of total benefits being 48 or less is 1.
If there is one claim, the probability is 48/60 = 0.8, from the uniform distribution.
If there are two claims, the density is uniform on a 60x60 square. The event where the total is 48
or less is represented by a triangle with base and height equal to 48. The triangle’s area is
48x48/2 = 1152. Dividing by the area of the square, the probability is 1152/3600 = 0.32.

Using the law of total probability, the answer is 0.7(1) + 0.2(0.8) + 0.1(0.32) = 0.892.

124. Solution: B

The sum of independent Poisson variables is also Poisson, with the means added. Thus the
number of tornadoes in a three week period is Poisson with a mean of 3x2 = 6. Then,
 60 61 62 63 
P( N < 4) = p (0) + p (1) + p (2) + p (3) = e −6  + + +  = 0.1512.
 0! 1! 2! 3! 

Page 35 of 125
125. Solution: A

The number of components that fail has a binomial(2, 0.05) distribution. Then,
 3  3
P( N ≥ 2)= p(2) + p(3)=   (0.05) 2 (0.95) +   (0.05)3= 0.00725.
 2  3

126. Solution: E

The profit variable X is normal with mean 100 and standard deviation 20. Then,
 0 − 100 60 − 100 
P <Z≤ 
P (0 < X ≤ 60)  20 20  F (−2) − F (−5)
P( X ≤ =
60 | X > 0) = = .
P( X > 0)  0 − 100  1 − F (−5)
PZ > 
 20 
For the normal distribution, F(–x) = 1 – F(x) and so the answer can be rewritten as
[1 – F(2) – 1 + F(5)]/[1 – 1 + F(5)] = [F(5) – F (2)]/F(5).

127. Solution: A

Let B be the event that the policyholder has high blood pressure and C be the event that the
policyholder has high cholesterol. We are given P(B) = 0.2, P(C) = 0.3, and P(C | B) = 0.25.
Then,
P( B ∩ C ) P(C | B) P( B) 0.25(0.2)
=
P( B | C ) = = = 1/ 6.
P (C ) P(C ) 0.3

128. Solution: D

This is a hypergeometric probability,


 20   5 
  
 1  = 1 20(5) 100
= = 0.333 ,
 25  25(24) / 2 300
 
2
Alternatively, the probability of the first worker being high risk and the second low risk is
(5/25)(20/24) = 100/600 and of the first being low risk and the second high risk is (20/25)(5/24)
= 100/600 for a total probability of 200/600 = 0.333.

Page 36 of 125
129. Solution: C

 X  1 x 1
= 60 ∫0 x 3 (1 − x) 2 dx= 60 ∫ x 4 (1 − x)dx= 60( x 5 / 5 − x 6 / 6) = 60(1/ 5 − 1/ 6)= 2
1
E
 1− X  1− x 0 0

 X  2  1 x2 1
∫ x 3 (1 − x) 2 dx= 60 ∫ x 5 dx= 60( x 6 / 6) = 60(1/ 6)= 10
1
E   = 60
 1 − X   0 (1 − x ) 2 0 0

 X 
 = 10 − 2 = 6
2
Var 
 1 − X 

130. Solution: B

P(at least one emergency room visit or at least one hospital stay) = 1 – 0.61 = 0.39 = P(at least
one emergency room visit) + P(at least one hospital stay) – P(at least one emergency room visit
and at least one hospital stay).

P(at least one emergency room visit and at least one hospital stay) = 1 – 0.70 + 1 – 0.85 – 0.39 =
0.060.

131. Solution: A

Let Y be the loss and X be the reimbursement. If the loss is less than 4,
P ( X ≤ x)= P (Y ≤ x)= 0.2 x for x < 4 because Y has a uniform distribution on [0, 5]. However,
the probability of the reimbursement being less than or equal to 4 is 1 because 4 is the maximum
reimbursement.

132. Solution: B

The number of males is 0.54(900) = 486 and of females is then 414.


The number of females over age 25 is 0.43(414) = 178.
The number over age 25 is 395. Therefore the number under age 25 is 505. The number of
females under age 25 is 414 – 178 = 236. Therefore the number of males under 25 is 505 – 236 =
269 and the probability is 269/505 =0.533.

133. Solution: C

Let R be the event the car is red and G be the event the car is green. Let E be the event that the
claim exceeds the deductible. Then,
P( R) P( E | R) 0.3(0.09) 0.027
P( R= | E) = = = 0.491.
P( R ) P ( E | R ) + P (G) P ( E | G) 0.3(0.09) + 0.7(0.04) 0.055
Note that if A is the probability of an accident,
P=( E | R ) P ( E | R and A) P= = 0.09.
( A | R ) 0.1(0.9)

Page 37 of 125
134. Solution: B

Let X and Y be the selected numbers. The probability Paul wins is P (| X − Y |≤ 3) . Of the 400
pairs, it is easiest to count the number of outcomes that satisfy this event:
If X = 1, then Y can be 1, 2, 3, or 4 (4 total)
If X = 2, then Y can be 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 (5 total)
For X = 3 there are 6, and for X = 4 through 17 there are 7. For X = 18, 19, and 20 the counts are
6, 5, and 4 respectively. The total is then 4 + 5 + 6 + 14(7) + 6 + 5 + 4 = 128. The probability is
128/400 = 0.32.

135. Solution: C

Let C and K denote respectively the event that the student answers the question correctly and the
event that he actually knows the answer. The known probabilities are
=
P(C | K c ) 0.5,= P(C | K ) 1,= =
P( K | C ) 0.824, P( K ) N / 20. Then,
P(C | K ) P( K ) 1( N / 20) N
=
0.824 P= (K | C) = =
P(C | K ) P( K ) + P(C | K ) P( K ) 1( N / 20) + 0.5(20 − N ) / 20 N + 0.5(20 − N )
c c

0.824(0.5 N + 10) = N
8.24 = 0.588 N
N = 14.

136. Solution: D

The probability that a randomly selected cable will not break under a force of 12,400 is
P (Y > 12, 400) =>P[ Z (12, 400 − 12, 432) / 25 =
−1.28] = 0.9. The number of cables, N, that will
not break has the binomial distribution with n = 400 and p = 0.9. This can be approximated by a
normal distribution with mean 360 and standard deviation 6. With the continuity correction,
P ( N ≥ 349) =≥P[ Z (348.5 − 360) / 6 = −1.9167] = 0.97.

137. Solution: D

Because the mode is 2 and 3, the parameter is 3 (when the parameter is a whole number the
probabilities at the parameter and at one less than the parameter are always equal).
Alternatively, the equation p(2) = p(3) can be solved for the parameter. Then the probability of
selling 4 or fewer policies is 0.815 and this is the first such probability that exceeds 0.75. Thus,
4 is the first number for which the probability of selling more than that number of policies is less
than 0.25.

Page 38 of 125
138. Solution: E

Of the 36 possible pairs, there are a total of 15 that have the red number larger than the green
number. Note that a list is not needed. There are 6 that have equal numbers showing and of the
remaining 30 one-half must have red larger than green. Of these 15, 9 have an odd sum for the
answer, 9/15 = 3/5. This is best done by counting, with 3 combinations adding to 7, 2
combinations each totaling 5 and 9, and 1 combination each totaling 3 and 11.

139. Solution: B

From the table the 93rd percentile comes from a z-score between 1.47 and 1.56. 1.47 implies a
test score of 503 + 1.47(98) = 647.1. Similarly, 1.56 implies a score of 655.9. The only multiple
of 10 in this range is 650. Abby’s z-score is then (650 – 521)/101 = 1.277. This is at the 90th
percentile of the standard normal distribution.

140. Solution: C

Let X, Y, and Z be the three lifetimes. We want


P ( X + Y > 1.9 Z ) = P (W = X + Y − 1.9 Z > 0) .
A linear combination of independent normal variables is also normal. In this case W has a mean
of 10 + 10 – 1.9(10) = 1 and a variance of 9 + 9 + 1.9(1.9)(9) = 50.49 for a standard deviation of
7.106.
Then the desired probability is that a standard normal variable exceeds (0 – 1)/7.106 = –0.141.
Interpolating in the normal tables gives 0.5557 + (0.5596 – 0.5557)(0.1) = 0.5561, which rounds
to 0.556.

141. Solution: C

We have
2 − 1.2 − d 0.8 − d
= P [insurer must pay at least 1.2
0.3 = ] P [loss ≥ 1.2 + =
d] =
2−0 2
d= 0.8 − 2(0.3) =
0.2.
Then,
2 − 1.44 − 0.2
P [insurer must pay at least 1.44
= ] P [loss ≥ 1.44 + =
d] = 0.18.
2−0

142. Solution: E

The cumulative distribution function for the exponential distribution of the lifespan is
F ( x) = 1 − e − λ x , for positive x.
The probability that the lifespan exceeds 4 years is 0.3 = e −4 λ . Thus λ = −(ln 0.3) / 4 .
1 − F (4) =
For positive x, the probability density function is
ln 0.3 (ln 0.3) x/4 ln 0.3
f ( x) =λ e−λ x = − e =
− (0.3) x /4 .
4 4

Page 39 of 125
Page 40 of 125
143. Solution: C

It is not necessary to determine the constant of proportionality. Let it be c. To determine the


mode, set the derivative of the density function equal to zero and solve.
d 2
=0 f ′(= x) −1
cx (1 + x3 )= 2cx(1 + x3 ) −1 + cx 2 [−(1 + x3 ) −2 ]3 x 2
dx
= 2cx(1 + x ) − 3cx 4 (multiplying by (1 + x3 ) 2 )
3

=2cx + 2cx 4 − 3cx 4 =2cx − cx 4


= 2 − x3 ⇒ x = 21/3 = 1.26.

144. Solution: C

It is not necessary to determine the constant of proportionality. Let it be c. To determine the


mode, set the derivative of the density function equal to zero and solve.
d
0= f ′( x) = cxe − x =ce − x − cx(2 x)e − x =ce − x (1 − 2 x 2 )
2 2 2 2

dx
= 1 − 2x2
2
(multiplying by ce x )

= x (1/ =
2)1/2 0.71.

145. Solution: E

A geometric probability distribution with mean 1.5 will have p = 2/3. So Pr(1 visit) = 2/3, P(two
visits) = 2/9, etc. There are four disjoint scenarios in which total admissions will be two or less.

Scenario 1: No employees have hospital admissions. Probability = 0.85 = 0.32768 .

Scenario 2: One employee has one admission and the other employees have none. Probability =
5
  (0.2)(0.8) (2 / 3) = 0.27307 .
4

1

Scenario 3: One employee has two admissions and the other employees have none. Probability =
5
  (0.2)(0.8) (2 / 9) = 0.09102 .
4

1

Scenario 4: Two employees each have one admission and the other three employees have none.
5
Probability =   (0.2) (0.8) (2 / 3)(2 / 3) = 0.09102 .
2 3

 2

The total probability is 0.78279.

Page 41 of 125
146. Solution: C

The intersection of the two events (third malfunction on the fifth day and not three malfunctions
on first three days) is the same as the first of those events. So the numerator of the conditional
probability is the negative binomial probability of the third success (malfunction) on the fifth
day, which is
 4
  (0.4) (0.6) (0.4) = 0.13824 .
2 2

 2
The denominator is the probability of not having three malfunctions in three days, which is
1 − (0.4)3 =.
0.936
The conditional probability is 0.13824/0.936 = 0.1477.

147. Solution: C

Let pi represent the probability that the patient's cancer is in stage i, for i = 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4.
The probabilities must sum to 1. That fact and the three facts given the question produce the
following equations.

p0 + p1 + p2 + p3 + p4 =
1
p0 + p1 + p2 =
0.75
.
p1 + p2 + p3 + p4 =
0.8
p0 + p1 + p3 + p4 =
0.8

Therefore, we have
p0 =( p0 + p1 + p2 + p3 + p4 ) − ( p1 + p2 + p3 + p4 ) =−
1 0.8 =0.2
p2 =( p0 + p1 + p2 + p3 + p4 ) − ( p0 + p1 + p3 + p4 ) =1 − 0.8 =0.2 .
p1 = ( p0 + p1 + p2 ) − p0 − p2 = 0.75 − 0.2 − 0.2 = 0.35.

148. Solution: D

Using the law of total probability, the requested probability is


∑ P(k + 0.75 < X ≤ k + 1| k < X ≤ k + 1) P(k < X ≤ k + 1) .


k =0
The first probability is
P(k + 0.75 < X ≤ k + 1)
P(k + 0.75 < X ≤ k + 1| k < X ≤ k + 1) =
P(k < X ≤ k + 1)
F (k + 1) − F (k + 0.75) 1 − e − ( k +1)/2 − 1 + e − ( k + 0.75)/2 e −0.375 − e −0.5
= = = = 0.205.
F (k + 1) − F (k ) 1 − e − ( k +1)/2 − 1 + e − k /2 1 − e −0.5

This probability factors out of the sum and the remaining probabilities sum to 1 so the requested
probability is 0.205.

Page 42 of 125
149. Solution: B

The requested probability can be determined as


P(3 of first 11 damaged) P(12th is damaged | 3 of first 11 damaged)
 7  13 
  
= =
3   8  4 35(1, 287) 4
= 0.119.
 20  9 167,960 9
 
 11 

150. Solution: E

Let M be the size of a family that visits the park and let N be the number of members of that
family that ride the roller coaster. We want P(M = 6 | N = 5). By Bayes theorem

P=
(M 6= | N 5)
=
P(N 5= | M 6)P=(M 6)
= 7
∑ P=
m =1
(N 5= | M m)P=
(M m)

1 2 1
= 6 28 = 3 = 35 = 35 ≈ 0.3097.
0+0+0+0+ 1 3 + 1 2 + 1 1 3 1
+ + 1 63 + 35 + 15 113
5 28 6 28 7 28 5 3 7

151. Solution: C

Let S represent the event that the selected borrower defaulted on at least one student loan.
Let C represent the event that the selected borrower defaulted on at least one car loan.
P(C ∩ S )
We need to find P(C | S ) = .
P( S )
P(C ∩ S ) P(C ∩ S c )
=
We are given P( S ) 0.3, = P( S | C ) = 0.4, P = c
(C | S ) = 0.28 .
P(C ) P( S c )
Then,
P(C ∩ S c )= 0.28 P( S c )= 0.28(1 − 0.3)= 0.196 .

Because
P(C )= P(C ∩ S ) + P(C ∩ S c ] and P (=C ) P (C ∩ S ) / 0.4 we have
P (C ∩ S ) / 0.4= P (C ∩ S ) + 0.196 ⇒ P(C ∩ S )= 0.196 /1.5= 0.13067.

Therefore,
P(C ∩ S ) 0.13067
=
P (C | S ) = = 0.4356,
P( S ) 0.3

Page 43 of 125
152. Solution: E

Without the deductible, the standard deviation is, from the uniform distribution,
b / 12 = 0.28868b . Let Y be the random variable representing the payout with the deductible.
b
b 1 y2
E (Y ) =∫ ( y − 0.1b) dy = − 0.1 y =0.5b − 0.1b − 0.005b + 0.01b =0.405b
0.1b b 2b 0.1b
b
b 1 y3
E (Y ) =∫0.1b ( y − 0.1b) b dy =3b − 0.1y + 0.01by
2 2 2

0.1b

= b 2 / 3 − 0.1b 2 + 0.01b 2 − 0.001b 2 / 3 + 0.001b 2 − 0.001b 2 = 0.243b 2


Var (Y ) =0.243b 2 − (0.405b) 2 =0.078975b 2
SD(Y ) = 0.28102b.
The ratio is 0.28102/0.28868 = 0.97347.

153. Solution: C

i) is false because G includes having one accident in year two.


ii) is false because there could be no accidents in year one.
iii) is true because it connects the descriptions of F and G (noting that “one or more” and “at
least one” are identical events) with “and.”
iv) is true because given one accident in year one (F), having a total of two or more in two years
is the same as one or more in year two (G).
v) is false because it requires year two to have at least two accidents.

154. Solution: B

P[ D] = P[ H ]P[ D | H ] + P[ M ]P[ D | M ] + P[ L]P[ D | L]


1  11 
0.009 = P[ H ]P[ D | H ] + P[ M ]  P[ D | H ]  + P[ L]  P[ D | H ] 
2  23 
1  1 
0.009 = 0.20 P[ D | H ] + 0.35  P[ D | H ]  + 0.45  P[ D | H ]  =0.45 P[ D | H ]
2  6 
= =
P[ D | H ] 0.009 / 0.45 0.02

155. Solution: C

If the deductible is less than 60 the equation is,


0.10(60 − d ) + 0.05(200 − d ) + 0.01(3000 − d ) = 30 ⇒ d = 100. .
So this cannot be the answer. If the deductible is between 60 and 200, the equation is
0.05(200 − d ) + 0.01(3000 − d ) = 30 ⇒ d = 166.67 . This is consistent with the assumption and is
the answer.

Page 44 of 125
156. Solution: C

The probability that none of the damaged houses are insured is


10 − k  k 
  
1  0  3  k (k − 1)(k − 2)
= =
120 10  720 .
 
3
k (k − 1)(k − 2) =
6
This cubic equation could be solved by expanding, subtracting 6, and refactoring. However,
because k must be an integer, the three factors must be integers and thus must be 3(2)(1) for k =
3.

The probability that at most one of the damaged houses is insured equals
10 − 3   3 
  
1  1  2 1 7(3) 22 11
+ = + = = .
120 10  120 120 120 60
 
3

157. Solution: B

This question is equivalent to “What is the probability that 9 different chips randomly drawn
from a box containing 4 red chips and 8 blues chips will contain the 4 red chips?” The
hypergeometric probability is
 48
  
 4 =
 5  1(56)
= 0.2545.
12  220
 
9

158. Solution: D

Let N be the number of sick days for an employee in three months. The sum of independent
Poisson variables is also Poisson and thus N is Poisson with a mean of 3.. Then,
 0 31 32  −3
−3 3
P[N ≤ =2] e  + + =  e (1 + 3 + 4.5)
= 0.423 .
 0! 1! 2! 
 
The answer is the complement, 1 – 0.423 = 0.577.

Page 45 of 125
159. Solution: B

A= 1 − [ P( N =
P( N > 3) = 0) + P( N =
1) + P( N = 3) ]
2) + P( N =
 3 9 27 
=1 − e −3 1 + + +  =1 − 13e −3 =0.3528
 1 2 6 
B=P( N > 1.5) = 1 − [ P( N =+ 1) ]
0) P( N =
 1.5 
= 1 − e −1.5 1 + =1 − 2.5e −1.5 =
0.4422
 1 
B – A = 0.4422 – 0.3528 = 0.0894.

160. Solution: E

For Policy A, the relevant equation is


0.64 =P( L > 1.44) =e −1.44/ µ
ln(0.64) = −0.44629 = −1.44 / µ
µ = 3.2266.
For Policy B, the relevant equation is
0.512 = P( L > d ) = e − d /3.2266
ln(0.512) = −0.6694 = −d / 3.2266
d = 2.1599.

161. Solution: B
5 5a +1 a +1
Because the density function must integrate to =
1, 1 ∫0 cx a=
dx c
a +1

= c
5a +1
.

From the given probability,


a +1
3.75 3.75a +1 a + 1 3.75a +1  3.75 
= ∫0 = = = 
a
0.4871 cx dx c 
a +1 5a +1 a + 1  5 
ln(0.4871) =−0.71929 = (a + 1) ln(3.75 / 5) =
−0.28768(a + 1)
a = (−0.71929) / (−0.28768) − 1 =1.5.
The probability of a claim exceeding 4 is,
1.5+1
5 5a +1 − 4a +1 a + 1 5a +1 − 4a +1 4
∫4 = = =
1−   =
a
cx dx c +
0.42757.
a +1 5 a 1 a +1 5

Page 46 of 125
162. Solution: A

Let N denote the number of warranty claims received. Then,


0.6 =P( N =0) =e − c ⇒ c =− ln(0.6) =0.5108.

The expected yearly insurance payments are:

5000[ P( N = 2) + 2 P( N =
3) + 3P( N =
4) + ]
= 5000[ P( N =+1) 2 P( N =+
2) 3P( N =+3) ] − 5000[ P ( N =+
1) P ( N =+
2) P( N =+
3) ]
=5000 E ( N ) − 5000[1 − P( N =0)] =5000(0.5108) − 5000(1 − 0.6) =554.

163. Solution: D

If L is the loss, the unreimbursed loss, X is


 L, L ≤ 180
X =
180, L > 180.

The expected unreimbursed loss is


180 180 1 b − 180
144 = E ( X ) = ∫
0
l[ f (l )]dl + 180 Pr( L > 180) = ∫
0
l dl + 180
b b
2 180
l 1802 1802 1802
= + 180 − = + 180 −
2b 0 b 2b b
144b= 1802 / 2 + 180b − 1802
16, 200 = 36b
b = 450.

164. Solution: B

Let X be normal with mean 10 and variance 4. Let Z have the standard normal distribution. Let
= 12th percentile. Then
 X − 10 p − 10   p − 10 
0.12= P( X ≤ p )= P  ≤ = P  Z ≤ .
 2 2   2 
From the tables, P ( Z ≤ −1.175) =0.12. Therefore,
p − 10
=−1.175; p − 10 = −2.35; p =7.65.
2

Page 47 of 125
165. Solution: D

From the normal table, the 14th percentile is associated with a z-score of −1.08 . Since the
means are equal and the standard deviation of company B's profit is 2.25 = 1.5 times the
standard deviation of company A's profit, a profit that is 1.08 standard deviations below the
mean for company A would be1.08/1.5 = 0.72 standard deviations below the mean for company
B. From the normal table, a z-score of −0.72 is associated with the 23.6th percentile.

166. Solution: C

The conditional variance is


Var ( X | X ≥=
10) E ( X 2 | X ≥ 10) − E ( X | X ≥ 10) 2
2

∞ 
∫ ∫
2 −0.2( x −5) −0.2( x −5)
x (0.2) e dx  x (0.2) e dx 
10 
− ∞10  .

 
∫10 0.2e  ∫ 0.2e
−0.2( x −5) −0.2( x −5)
dx dx 
 10 
Performing integration (using integration by parts) produces the answer of 25.

An alternative solution is to first determine the density function for the conditional distribution.
It is
0.2e −0.2( y −5) 0.2e −0.2( y −5) 0.2e −0.2( y −5)
=f ( y) ∞ = = ∞
= −0.2(5)
0.2e −0.2( y −10) , y > 10 .
−0.2( x −5)
dx −e
e
∫ 0.2e
−0.2( x −5)
10
10
Then note that Y – 10 has an exponential distraction with mean 5. Subtracting a constant does not
change the variance, so the variance of Y is also 25.

167. Solution: C

Let X and Y represent the annual profits for companies A and B, respectively and m represent the
common mean and s the standard deviation of Y. Let Z represent the standard normal random
variable.

Then because X’s standard deviation is one-half its mean,


 X −m 0−m
P( X <=
0) P  < =  P( Z < −= 2) 0.0228.
 0.5m 0.5m 

Therefore company B’s probability of a loss is 0.9(0.0228) = 0.02052. Then,


Y −m 0−m
= P(Y <=
0.02052 0) P  < =  P( Z < −m / s ) . From the tables, –2.04 = –m/s and
 s s 
therefore s = m/2.04. The ratio of the standard deviations is (m/2.04)/(0.5m) = 0.98.

Page 48 of 125
168. Solution: B

Y is a normal random variable with mean 1.04(100) + 5 = 109 and standard deviation 1.04(25) =
26. The average of 25 observations has mean 109 and standard deviation 26/5 = 5.2. The
requested probability is
 100 − 109 110 − 109 
P (100 < sample mean < 110) =P =−1.73 < Z < =0.19 
 5.2 5.2 
= 0.5753 − (1 − 0.9582)
= 0.5335.

169. Solution: E

The possible events are (0,0), (0,1), (0,2), (0,3), (1,1), (1,2), (1,3), (2,2), (2,3), and (3,3). The
probabilities (without c) sum to 0 + 2 + 4 + 6 + 3 + 5 + 7 + 6 + 8 + 9 = 50. Therefor c = 1/50.
The number of tornadoes with fewer than 50 million in losses is Y – X. The expected value is
(1/50)[0(0) + 1(2) + 2(4) + 3(6) + 0(3) + 1(5) + 2(7) + 0(6) + 1(8) + 0(9)]=55/50 = 1.1.

170. Solution: D

Consider three cases, one for each result of the first interview.
Independent (prob 0.5): Expected absolute difference is (4/9)(0) +(5/9)(1) = 5/9
Republican (prob =0.3): Expected absolute difference is (2/9)(0) + (5/9)(1) + (2/9)(2) = 1
Democrat (prob = 0.2): Expected absolute difference is (3/9)(0) + (5/9)(1) + (1/9)(2) = 7/9.
The unconditional expectation is 0.5(5/9) + 0.3(1) + 0.2(7/9) = 6.6/9 = 11/15.

Alternatively, the six possible outcomes can be listed along with their probabilities and absolute
differences.

171. Solution: C

Let Z = XY. Let a, b, and c be the probabilities that Z takes on the values 0, 1, and 2, respectively.
We have b = p(1,1) and c = p(1,,2) and thus 3b = c. And because the probabilities sum to 1,
a = 1 – b – c = 1 – 4b. Then, E(Z) = b + 2c = 7b, E(Z*Z) = b + 4c = 13b. Then,
Var ( Z=) 13b − 49b 2
(d / db)Var ( Z ) = 13 − 98b = 0 ⇒ b = 13 / 98.
The probability that either X or Y is zero is the same as the probability that Z is 0 which is
a = 1 – 4b = 46/98 = 23/49.

Page 49 of 125
172. Solution: C

Let J and K be the random variables for the number of severe storms in each city.
P=( K 5=
| J j ) P=( J j)
P( J= j | K= 5)=
P( K = 5)
5
P( K= 5 | J= 3)= 1/ 6, P( J= 3)=   0.630.4=2
0.3456
 3
5
P( K= 5 | J= 4)= 1/ 3, P( J= 4)=   0.64 0.4=1
0.2592
 
4
5
P( K= 5 | J= 5)= 1/ 2, P( J= 5)=   0.650.4=0
0.07776
5
P( K= 5)= (1/ 6)(0.3456) + (1/ 3)(0.2592) + (1/ 2)(0.07776) =0.18288
(1/ 6)(0.3456)
P( J= 3 | K= 5)= = 0.31496
0.18288
(1/ 3)(0.2592)
P( J= 4 | K= 5)= = 0.47244
0.18288
(1/ 2)(0.07776)
P ( J= 5 | K= 5)= = 0.21260
0.18288
E(J | K = 5) =
3(0.31496) + 4(0.47244) + 5(0.21260) = 3.89764.

173. Solution: B

Given N + S = 2, there are 3 possibilities (N,S) = (2,0), (1,1), (0,2) with probabilities 0.12, 0.18,
and 0.10 respectively.
The associated conditional probabilities are

P(N = 0 | N + S = 2) = 0.10/0.40 = 0.25,


P(N = 1 | N + S = 2) = 0.18/0.40 = 0.45,
P(N = 2 | N + S = 2) = 0.12/0.40 = 0.30.

The mean is 0.25(0) + 0.45(1) + 0.30(2) = 1.05.


The second moment is 0.25(0) + 0.45(1) + 0.30(4) = 1.65.
The variance is 1.65 – (1.05)(1.05) = 0.5475.

Page 50 of 125
174. Solution: A

Because the territories are evenly distributed, the probabilities can be averaged. Thus the
probability of a 100 claim is 0.80, of a 500 claim is 0.13, and of a 1000 claim as 0.07. The mean
is 0.80(100) + 0.13(500) + 0.07(1000) = 215. The second moment is 0.80(10,000) +
0.13(250,000) + 0.07(1,000,000) = 110,500. The variance is 110,500 – (215)(215) = 64,275.
The standard deviation is 253.53.

175. Solution: D

With each load of coal having mean 1.5 and standard deviation 0.25, twenty loads have a mean
of 20(1.5) = 30 and a variance of 20(0.0625) = 1.25. The total amount removed is normal with
mean 4(7.25) = 29 and standard deviation 4(0.25) = 1. The difference is normal with mean 30 –
29 = 1 and standard deviation sqrt(1.25 + 1) = 1.5. If D is that difference,
 0 −1 
P( D > 0) = PZ > = −0.67  =0.7486.
 1.5 

176. Solution: C

The probability needs to be calculated for each total number of claims.


0: 0.5(0.2) = 0.10
1: 0.5(0.3) + 0.3(0.2) = 0.21
2: 0.5(0.4) + 0.3(0.3) + 0.2(0.2) = 0.33
3: 0.5(0.1) + 0.3(0.4) + 0.2(0.3) + 0.0(0.2) = 0.23
At this point there is only 0.13 probability remaining, so the mode must be at 2.

177. Solution: B

Let X represent the number of policyholders who undergo radiation.


Let Y represent the number of policyholders who undergo chemotherapy.
X and Y are independent and binomially distributed with 15 trials each and with "success"
probabilities 0.9 and 0.4, respectively.

The variances are 15(0.9)(0.1) = 1.35 and 15(0.4)(0.6) = 3.6.

The total paid is 2X + 3Y and so the variance is 4(1.35) + 9(3.6) = 37.8.

Page 51 of 125
178. Solution: C

Let X and Y represent the number of selected patients with early stage and advanced stage
cancer, respectively. We need to calculate E (Y | X ≥ 1) .

From conditioning on whether or not X ≥ 1 , we have


E (Y ) =P[ X =0]E (Y | X =
0) + P[ X ≥ 1]E (Y | X ≥ 1) .

Observe that P[ X == 0] (1 − 0.2)6 = (0.8)6 , P[ X ≥ 1] =1 − P[ X =0] =1 − (0.8)6 , and


= = 0.6 . Also, note that if none of the 6 selected patients have early stage cancer,
E (Y ) 6(0.1)
then each of the 6 selected patients would independently have conditional probability
0.1 1
= of having late stage cancer, so E (Y | X= 0)= 6(1/ 8)= 0.75 .
1 − 0.2 8

Therefore,

E (Y ) − P[ X= 0]E (Y | X= 0) 0.6 − (0.8)6 (0.75)


=
E (Y | X ≥ 1) = = 0.547 .
P[ X ≥ 1] 1 − (0.8)6

179. Solution: A

Because there must be two smaller values and one larger value than X, X cannot be 1, 2, or 12. If
X is 3, there is one choice for the two smallest of the four integers and nine choices for the
largest integer. If X is 4, there are three choices for the two smallest of the four integers and
eight choices for the largest integer. In general, if X = x, there are (x – 1) choose (2) choices for
the two smallest integers and 12 – x choices for the largest integer. The total number of ways of
choosing 4 integers from 12 integers is 12 choose 4 which is 12!/(4!8!) = 495. So the probability
that X = x is:

 x − 1
  (12 − x)
 2  ( x − 1)( x − 2)(12 − x)
= .
495 990

Page 52 of 125
180. Solution: A

We have
P( X < k ) − P( X ≤ 10, 000)
0.95 = P ( X < k | X > 10, 000) =
1 − P (X ≤ 10, 000)
0.95[1 − P ( X ≤ 10, 000)]= 0.9582 − P ( X ≤ 10, 000)
0.9582 − 0.95
P( X ≤ 10, 000)
= = 0.164
1 − 0.95
 10, 000 − 12, 000 
0.164 = Φ  .
 c 
The z-value that corresponds to 0.164 is between –0.98 and –0.97. Interpolating leads to
z = –0.978. Then,
 10, 000 − 12, 000  −2, 000
0.164 = Φ   ⇒ −0.978 = ⇒ c = 2045.
 c  c

181. Solution: B

Before applying the deductible, the median is 500 and the 20th percentile is 200. After applying
the deductible, the median payment is 500 – 250 = 250 and the 20th percentile is max(0, 200 –
250) = 0. The difference is 250.

182. Solution: B

32 own L/A/H
55 own L/H so 55 – 32 = 23 own L/H/notA
96 own A/H so 96 – 32 = 64 own A/H/notL
207 own H so 207 – 32 – 23 – 64 = 88 own H only
L only = X, A only = X + 76
88 + X + (X + 76) = 270 so X = 53 so L only = 53, A only = 129
129 + 64 + 32 + L/A/notH = 243 so L/A/notH = 18
Total clients = 53 + 129 + 88 + 18 + 64 + 23 + 32 = 407

Alternatively, a Venn diagram could be used to guide the calculations.

Page 53 of 125
183. Solution: D

Then 290 = 45 + 45 + x + x, thus x = 100.


Also 228 = 100 + y + 16 + 77, thus y = 35.
Total clients = 145 + 82 + 16 + 35 + 100 + 77 + 45 = 500.

184. Solution: D

Let A, B, and C be the sets of policies in the portfolio on three-bedroom homes, one-story homes,
and two-bath homes, respectively. We are asked to calculate 1000 − n( A ∪ B ∪ C ) , where n(D)
denotes the number of elements of the set D. Then,
n( A ∪ B ∪ C ) = n( A) + n( B ) + n(C ) − n( A ∩ B ) − n( A ∩ C ) − n( B ∩ C ) + n( A ∩ B ∩ C )
= 130 + 280 + 150 − 40 − 30 − 50 + 10 = 450.
The answer is 1000 – 450 = 550.

185. Solution: B

We seek the number of ways to select 4 individuals from 7 and choose one selected member as
subcommittee chair. (The existence of a subcommittee secretary is irrelevant.) There are (7
choose 4) = 7(6)(5)(3)/4! = 35 ways to form a collection of 4 individuals from 7. For each of
them, there are 4 ways to assign a chair. The product, 140, is the number of different ways to
form a subcommittee of 4 individuals and assign a chair and thus is the maximum number
without repetition.

Page 54 of 125
186. Solution: D

P (2 red and 2 blue transferred and blue drawn)


P (2 red and 2 blue transferred | blue drawn) =
P (blue drawn)
 8  6 
  
=    ×=
2 2 2 28(15) 2 840
P (2 red and 2 blue transferred and blue drawn) ×=
14  4 1001 4 4004
 
4
 8  6   8  6   8  6   8  6 
           
3 1 1 60 + 480 + 840 + 336 1716
=    × +    × +    × +   =
0 4 4 1 3 3 2 2 2
P (blue drawn) × =
14  4 14  4 14  4 14  4 4004 4004
       
4 4 4 4
840
P (2 red and 2 blue transferred | blue drawn) = = 0.49.
1716

187. Solution: D

If a policy is of Type A, the probability that the two claims are equal is (0.4)(0.4) + (0.3)(0.3) +
(0.2)(0.2) + (0.1)(0.1) = 0.16 + 0.09 + 0.04 + 0.01 = 0.30.
If a policy is of Type B, the probability that the two claims are equal is 4(0.25)(0.25) = 0.25.
Therefore, the probability that a randomly selected policy has equal claims is 0.70(0.30) +
0.30(0.25) = 0.285.
If four policies are selected, the desired probability is the probability that a binomial random
variable with n = 4 and p = 0.285 is 1. This is 4(0.285)(1 – 0.285)^3 = 0.417.

Page 55 of 125
188. Solution: A

Let A = event that person wants life policy P


B = event that person wants life policy Q
C = event that person wants the health policy
and let a, b, c, d be the probabilities of the regions as shown.

i) is reflected by no intersection of A and B


iv) is reflected by the 0.18 in the diagram
ii) implies a + b = 2(c + d)
iii) implies b + c + 0.18 = 0.45 or b + c = 0.27
v) implies P([A or B] and C) = P(A or B)P(C) or b + c = (a + b + c + d)(0.45)

So 0.27 = (a + d + 0.27)(0.45) and then a + d = 0.33.


The desired probability is a + 0.18 + d = 0.33 + 0.18 = 0.51.

189. Solution: B

The state will receive 800,000($1) = $800,000 in revenue, and will lose money if there are 2 or
more winning tickets sold. The player’s entry can be viewed as fixed. The probability the
lottery randomly selects those same six numbers is from a hypergeometric distribution and is
 6  24 
  
 6= 0  = 1(1) 6(5)(4)(3)(2)(1)
=
1
.
 30  30! 30(29)(28)(27)(26)(25) 593,775
  6!(24!)
6
The number of winners has a binomial distribution with n = 800,000 and p = 1/593,775. The
desired probability is
Pr(2 or more winners) =
1 − Pr(0 winners) − Pr(1 winner)
0 800,000 1 799,999
 800,000   1   593,774   800,000   1   593,774 
=
1−      −    
 0   593,775   593,775   1   593,775   593,775 
=
1 − 0.2599 − 0.3502 =
0.39.

Page 56 of 125
190. Solution: E

The number that have errors is a binomial random variable with p = 0.03 and n = 100. Let X be
the number that have errors. Then,
Pr(number that are error-free ≤ 95) =Pr( X ≥ 5) =1 − P(0) − P(1) − P(2) − P (3) − P (4)
 100  100  100  100 
=
1−   ( 0.03) ( 0.97 ) −  1  ( 0.03) ( 0.97 ) −  2  ( 0.03) ( 0.97 ) −  3  ( 0.03) ( 0.97 )
0 100 1 99 2 98 3 97

 0       
100 
−  ( 0.03) ( 0.97 ) =
4 96
0.1821.
 4 
Or, the Poisson approximation can be used. Then, λ = 3 and
e −3 30 e −3 31 e −3 32 e −3 33 e −3 34  9 27 81 
P ( X ≥ 5) = 1− − − − − 1 − e −3 1 + 3 + + +  =
= 0.1847.
0! 1! 2! 3! 4!  2 6 24 

191. Solution: D

P[ A ∪ B ∪ C ] = P[ A] + P[ B] + P[C ] − P[ A ∩ B] − P[ A ∩ C ] − P[ B ∩ C ] + P[ A ∩ B ∩ C ]
= 0.2 + 0.1 + 0.3 − 0.2(0.1) − 0 − 0.1(0.3) + 0= 0.55.

192. Solution: A

The probability a union of three events equals the sum of their probabilities if and only if they
are mutually exclusive, that is, no two of them can both occur.

Events A and B cannot both occur since no thefts in the first three years would imply no thefts in
the second year, thus precluding the possibility of at least 1 theft in the second year.
Events A and E cannot both occur since no thefts in the first three years would imply no thefts in
the third year, thus precluding the possibility of at least 1 theft in the third year.
Events B and E cannot both occur since it is impossible to experience both no thefts and at least
1 theft in the second year.
Thus, events A, B, and E satisfy the desired condition.

193. Solution: D

Consider the two mutually exclusive events “first envelope correct” and “first envelope
incorrect.” The probability of the first event is 1/4 and meets the requirement of at least one
correct. For the 3/4 of the time the first envelope is incorrect, there are now 3 more envelopes to
fill. Of the six permutations, three will place one letter correctly. The total probability is 1/4 +
3/4(3/6) = 5/8.

194. Solution: C

The deductible is exceeded for 4, 5 or 6 office visits. Therefore, the requested probability is
0.02/(0.04 + 0.02 + 0.01) = 0.286.

Page 57 of 125
195. Solution: C

Let A be the event that part A is working after one year and B be the event that part B is working
after one year. Then,
P( A and B) P( A) + P ( B ) − P ( A or B ) 0.8 + 0.6 − 0.9
=
P( B | A) = = = 5 / 8.
P( A) P( A) 0.8

196. Solution: D

 2 47
   
1   2   3  = 0.245.
13 
 
6 

197. Solution: E

The maximum number of draws needed is 5. This can only happen if the first four draws produce
four different colors. The first draw can be any sock. The second draw must be one of the 6 (of 7
remaining) that are different. The third draw must be one of the 4 (of 6) that are different from
the first two. The fourth draw must be one of the 2 (of 5) that are different. The probability all
of this happens is 1(6/7)(4/6)(2/5) = 0.2286.

198. Solution: E

Define the events as follows:


A = applies for a mortgage
S = initially spoke to an attendant
R = call returned the same day
N = call returned the next day
Then, using Bayes’ Theorem,
P( A | S ) P( S )
P ( S | A) =
P( A | S ) P( S ) + P( A | R) P( R) + P( A | N ) P( N )
0.8(0.6)
= 0.69.
0.8(0.6) + 0.6(0.4)(0.75) + 0.4(0.4)(0.25)

Page 58 of 125
199. Solution: A

Define the events as follows:


C = files a claim
N = no lifting
M = moderate lifting
H = heavy lifting
Then, using Bayes’ Theorem,
P (C | N ) P ( N )
P ( M or H | C ) =1 − P( N | C ) =
1−
P (C | N ) P ( N ) + P (C | M) P(M) + P(C | H) P(H)
0.05(0.4)
= 1− = 1 − 0.25 = 0.75.
0.05(0.4) + 0.08(0.5) + 0.2(0.1)

200. Solution: E

From the Law of Total Probability, the required probability is


∑ k =0 P(0 accidents with an uninsured driver | k accidents)P(k accidents)

−5 k −5
e 5 e e −3.75 (3.75) k
∑ ∑
∞ ∞ −1.25
= k
k 0=
(0.75) =
−3.75 k 0
= e= 0.287.
k! e k!

201. Solution: B

From the binomial distribution formula, the probability P that a given patient tests positive for at
3− 23 3− 3  3
least 2 of these 3 risk factors is P=   p (1 − p ) +   p (1 − p ) = 3 p (1 − p ) + p .
2 3 2 3

 2  3
Using the geometric distribution formula with probability of success P= 3 p 2 (1 − p ) + p 3 , the
probability that exactly n patients are tested is

n −1
(1 − P) n −1 P = 1 − 3 p 2 (1 − p ) − p 3  3 p (1 − p ) + p  .
2 3

202. Solution: B

For there to be more than three calls before one completed survey all that is required is the first
three calls not result in a completed survey. This probability is (1 − 0.25)3 =
0.42.

Page 59 of 125
203. Solution: B

For a given x, there are x – 1 choices for the smaller of the four integers and 12 – x choices for
12 − x  ( x − 1)(12 − x)(11 − x)
the two larger integers. Thus, there are ( x − 1)  = triples that satisfy
 2  2
12 
the event. The total number of possible draws is   = 495 and the probability is
4
( x − 1)(12 − x)(11 − x) 1 x − 1)(12 − x)(11 − x)
= .
2 495 990

204. Solution: D

The cumulative distribution function for the exponential distribution is


1 − e−λ x =
F ( x) = 1 − e− x / µ =
1 − e − x /100 , x > 0 .

From the given probability data,

F (50) − F (40) =F (r ) − F (60)


( ) (
1 − e −50/100 − 1 − e −40/100 =1 − e − r /100 − 1 − e −60/100 )
e −40/100 − e −50/100 = e −60/100 − e − r /100 .
− r /100 −60/100 −40/100 −50/100
e =e −e +e = 0.4850
−r /100 = ln(0.4850) =
−0.7236
r = 72.36.

205. Solution: B

The desired event is equivalent to the time of the next accident being between 365 and 730 days
from now. The probability is
F (730) − F (365) =1 − e −730/200 − (1 − e −365/200 ) =e −1.825 − e −3.65 =0.1352.
Note that the problem provides no information about the distribution of the time to subsequent
accidents, but that information is not needed. With nothing given, anything can be assumed. If
the time to subsequent accidents has the same exponential distribution and the times are
independent, then the number of accidents in each 365 day period is Poisson with mean 1.825.
Then the required probability is e −1.825 (1 − e −1.825 ) =
0.1352.

Page 60 of 125
206. Solution: C

Pr( Z ≤ 0.72) = 0.7642 = Pr( X ≤ 2000) = Pr[ Z ≤ (2000 − µ ) / σ ]


0.72 (2000 − µ ) / σ
=
Pr( Z ≤ 1.32) = 0.9066 = Pr( X ≤ 3000) = Pr[ Z ≤ (3000 − µ ) / σ ]
1.32 (3000 − µ ) / σ
=
(3000 − µ ) / (2000 − µ )
1.32 / 0.72 =
1.8333(2000 − µ )= 3000 − µ
µ =[1.8333(2000) − 3000] / (1.8333 − 1) = 800
σ= (3000 − µ ) /1.32 =
1666.67
Pr( X ≤ 1000) = Pr[ Z ≤ (1000 − 800) /1666.67] = Pr( Z ≤ 0.12) = 0.5478.

207. Solution: B

 1 −V −V 
P( X > V ) =−
1 P( X ≤ V ) =−
1 F (V ) =−
1 1 − e V =0.10.
 10 

208. Solution: E

The given mean of 5 years corresponds to the pdf f (t ) = 0.2e −0.2t and the cumulative distribution
function F (t ) = 1 − e −0.2t . The conditional pdf is
f (t ) 0.2e −0.2t
g=
(t ) = , 0 < t < 10 .
F (10) 1 − e −2
The conditional mean is (using integration by parts)
−0.2 t
10 10 0.2e 10
E (T | T <= 10) ∫ tg =(t )dt ∫ t −
= dt 0.2313∫ te −0.2t dt
0 0 1− e 2 0

= 0.2313 t (−5e −0.2t ) − ∫ −5e −0.2t= )dt  0.2323  −6.7668 + 0 − 25e −0.2t 
10 10 10

 0 0   0 
= 0.2313[−6.7668 − 3.3834 + 25] = 3.435.

209. Solution: D

x
∫ 2e dy =
−2 y x
F ( x) = −e −2 y =
1 − e −2 x
0 0

P[ X ≤ 0.5] F (0.5) 1 − e −1
P[ X ≤ 0.5 | X ≤ 1.0]= = = = 0.731.
P[ X ≤ 1.0] F (1.0) 1 − e −2

Page 61 of 125
210. Solution: B

If E and F are independent, so are E and the complement of F. Then,


P(exactly one) = P( E ∩ F c ) + P( E c ∩ F ) = 0.84(0.35) + 0.16(0.65) = 0.398.

211. Solution: E

Let M and N be the random variables for the number of claims in the first and second month.
Then
P[ M + N ≤ 3, M < 2]
P[ M + N > 3 | M < 2] =1 − P[ M + N ≤ 3 | M < 2] =1 −
P[ M < 2]
P[ M = 0, N =+ 0] P[ M = 1, N =+ 0] P[ M = 0, N = 1] + P[ M = 1, N = 1]
+ P[ M = 0, N =+ 2] P[ M = 1, N =+ 2] P[ M = 0, N = 3]
= 1−
P[ M =+ 0] P[ M = 1]
(2 / 3)(2 / 3) + (2 / 9)(2 / 3) + (2 / 3)(2 / 9) + (2 / 9)(2 / 9) + (2 / 3)(2 / 27) + (2 / 9)(2 / 27) + (2 / 3)(2 / 81)
= 1−
2 / 3+ 2 / 9
0.87243
=1− = 0.0185.
0.88889

212. Solution: C

Let X = number of patients tested, which is geometrically distributed with constant “success”
probability, say p.

P[ X ≥ n] = P[first n − 1 patients do not have apnea] =(1 − p ) n −1.

Therefore,

r = P[ X ≥ 4] =(1 − p )3
P[ X ≥ 12] (1 − p )11 8 8
P[ X ≥ 12 | X ≥ 4] = = = (1 − p ) 8
= 
 (1 − p ) 
3 3
 = r 3
P[ X ≥ 4] (1 − p )3

213. Solution: D

The number of defects has a binomial distribution with n = 100 and p = 0.02.
100  2 98
  (0.02) (0.98)
P[ X = 2]  2 
P[ X= 2 | X ≤ 2]= =
P[ X ≤ 2] 100  100  100 
 (0.02) (0.98) +   (0.02) (0.98) + 
0 100 1 99 2 98
  (0.02) (0.98)
 0   1   2 
0.27341
= 0.404.
0.13262 + 0.27065 + 0.27341

Page 62 of 125
214. Solution: A

The town experiences one tornado every 0.8 years on average, which is the mean of the
exponential distribution. The median is found from

0.5 = P[ X ≤ m] =− 1 e − m /0.8
ln(0.5) = −m / 0.8
m=
−0.8ln(0.5) =
0.55.

215. Solution: A

Let X = the amount of a loss. Ignoring the deductible, the median loss is the solution to

∫ 0.25e
−0.25 x
0.5 = P[ X > m] = dx = 0 − (−e −0.25 m ) = e −0.25 m which is m = –4(ln0.5) = 2.77.
m
Because 2.77 > 1, the loss exceeds 2.77 if and only if the claim payment exceeds
2.77 – 1 = 1.77, which is therefore the median claim payment.

216. Solution: B

The payment random variable is 1000(X – 2) if positive, where X has a Poisson distribution with
mean 1. The expected value is
e −1  ∞ e −1 e −1 
1000∑ x 3 ( x −= 1000  ∑ x 0= − ∑ x 0 ( x − 2)
∞ 2
=
2)= ( x − 2) 
x!  x! x! 
= 1000 (1 − 2 − [−2e −1 − e −=
1
]) 1000(−1 + 3e=
−1
) 104.
Note the first sum splits into the expected value of X, which is 1, and 2 times the sum of the
probabilities (also 1).

217. Solution: C

Let X be the number of employees who die. The expected cost to the company is
100 P[Y = 1] + 200 P[Y =2] + 300 P[Y =
3] + 400 P[Y > 3]
= 100(2)e −2 + 200(2)e −2 + 300(4 / 3)e −2 + 400[1 − (1 + 2 + 2 + 4 / 3)e −2 ]
400 − 1533.33e −2 =
= 192.

Page 63 of 125
218. Solution: B

Let X be the number of burglaries. Then,


∞ ∞

∑ xp( x) ∑ xp( x) − (0) p(0) − (1) p(1)


E (= =
X|X ≥ 2) = x
x 2= 0

1 − p (0) − p (1) 1 − p (0) − p (1)


1 − p (1) 1 − e −1
= = = 2.39.
1 − p(0) − p(1) 1 − e −1 − e −1

219. Solution: A

The expected unreimbursed loss is


d 1 450 1 d2 450 − d 1
∫0 x 450 dx + ∫d d 450 dx = 900 + d 450 = 900 (900d − d ) = 56
2

d 2 − 900d + 50, 400 = 0


900 ± 9002 − 201, 600 900 − 780
=d = = 60.
2 2

220. Solution: D

Let X represent the loss due to the accident.


From the given information, the probability that X is in[0, b] is 0.75, which is larger than 0.5. So
the median, 672, must lie in the interval [0, b].

Note that in a uniform distribution over an interval I, the probability of landing in an interval J is
the length of the intersection of J and I, divided by the length of I.
 672 − 0   0.75 
Therefore, we have 0.5 = P[X ≤ 672] = 0.75  =
 which gives b 672=   1008 .
 b−0   0.5 

From the law of total probability applied to means, the mean loss due to the accident is
E( X ) P[minor acc.]E( X | minor acc.) + P[major acc.]E( X | major acc.)
0.75E( X | X is uniform on [0, b]) + 0.25E( X | X is uniform on [b,3b]) .
 0 + 1008   1008 + 3(1008) 
=
0.75   + 0.25  =882.
 2   2 

221. Solution: C

The claim amount distribution is a mixture distribution with 20% point mass at 0. To obtain the
median, the remaining 30% probability is from the case where there is a non-zero payment. This
corresponds to the 30/(1 – 0.2) = 37.5 percentile of the unconditional claim amount distribution.
The 37.5 percentile of the standard normal distribution is at z = –0.3187 and thus the median is
1000 – 0.3187(400) = 873.

Page 64 of 125
222. Solution: B

First, the z-score associated with the deductible is:


15, 000 − 20, 000
z= = −1.11
4,500
Next, using the normal table, we find that the probability that a loss exceeds the deductible is:

P ( Z > −1.11) =0.8665.

The 95th percentile of losses that exceed the deductible is the 1 – 0.05(0.8665) = 0.9567 =
95.67th percentile of all losses.

The 95.67th percentile of all losses is between 1.71 and 1.72 standard deviations above the mean.
To the nearest hundred, both of these correspond to a loss amount of 27,700.

223. Solution: C

The z-score corresponding to the 98th percentile is 2.054. The answer is 20 + 2.054(2) = 24.108.

224. Solution: C

Let T be the time of registration. Due to symmetry of the density function about 6.5. The
constant of proportionality, c, can be solved from
6.5
0.5 = ∫ c t +11 dt = c ln(t + 1) 0 = c ln(7.5) , which gives c = 0.5/ln(7.5).
6.5
0
Again using the symmetry, if 60th percentile of T is at k, then P[T ≤ 13 − k ] =
0.4. Thus,
13− k 0.5 1 0.5
0.4= P[T ≤ 13 − k ]= ∫ dt= ln(14 − k )
0 ln(7.5) t + 1 ln(7.5)
=
ln(14 − k ) 0.8ln(7.5)
= 1.6119
14 −= = 5.0124
k e1.6119
k = 8.99.

225. Solution: E

The distribution function of L is F ( x) = 1 − e − λ x and its variance is 1 / λ 2 . We are given


F(2) = 1.9F(1) and therefore,
1 − e −2 λ = 1.9(1 − e − λ )
(1 − e − λ )(1 + e − λ ) = 1.9(1 − e − λ )
e − λ = 0.9
λ= − ln(0.9) =
0.10536
=
Var ( L) 1/=
0.105362 90.1.

Page 65 of 125
226. Solution: D

We have Y = 0 when X < d and Y = X – d otherwise. Then, noting that the second moment of an
exponential random variable is twice the square of the mean,
d ∞ ∞
∫ 0(0.1e )dx + ∫ ( x − d )(0.1e )dx = 0 + ∫ x(0.1e −0.1( x + d ) )dx =
−0.1 x −0.1 x
E (Y ) = e −0.1d (10)
o d 0
d ∞ ∞
∫ 0 (0.1e )dx + ∫ ( x − d ) (0.1e )dx = 0 + ∫ x 2 (0.1e −0.1( x + d ) )dx =
−0.1 x −0.1 x
E (Y 2 ) = 2 2
e −0.1d (200)
o d 0
−0.1d −0.1d −0.1d −0.2 d
Var(Y) =e (200) − [e (10)] =100[2e
2
−e ],

227. Solution: C

For the Poisson distribution the variance is equal to the mean and hence the second moment is
the mean plus the square of the mean. Then,
E[ X ] =0.1(1) + 0.5(2) + 0.4(10) =5.1
E[ X 2 ]= 0.1(1 + 12 ) + 0.5(2 + 22 ) + 0.4(10 + 102 )= 47.2
Var ( X ) = 47.2 − 5.12 = 21.19.

228. Solution: C

Let X be the number of tornadoes and Y be the conditional distribution of X given that X is at
least one. There are (at least) two ways to solve this problem. The first way is to begin with the
probability function for Y and observe that starting the sums at zero adds nothing because that
term is zero. Then note that the sums are the first and second moments of a regular Poisson
distribution.
P[ X = y ] 3 y e −3 / y !
p ( y ) = P[Y = y ] = P[ X = y | X > 0] = = , y = 1, 2,
P[ X > 0] 1 − e −3
1 3 y e −3 1 3 y e −3 3
−3 ∑ y 1 = −3 ∑ y 0
∞ ∞
=E (Y ) = y = y
=
1− e y! 1− e y! 1 − e −3
y −3 y −3
1 2 3 e 1 2 3 e 3 + 32
∑ ∑
∞ ∞
=E (Y 2
) = y = y
=
1 − e −3 y 1 = y! 1 − e −3 y 0 y! 1 − e −3
2
12  3 
Var (Y ) = −3 −  −3 
=
2.6609.
1− e  1− e 

Page 66 of 125
The second way is to use formulas about conditional expectation based on the law of total
probability.
E( X ) =E( X | X =0) P[ X = 0] + E ( X | X > 0) P[ X > 0]
3= 0(e −3 ) + E ( X | X > 0)(1 − e −3 )
3
E( X | X > = 0) = 3.1572
1 − e −3
E( X 2 ) = E( X 2 | X = 0) P[ X =0] + E ( X 2 | X > 0) P[ X > 0]
3 + 3=
2
0(e −3 ) + E ( X 2 | X > 0)(1 − e −3 )
12
E( X 2 | X > = 0) = 12.6287
1 − e −3
Var ( X ) = 12.6287 − 3.15722 = 2.6608.

229. Solution: C

Let X represent individual expense. Then,


0, 200 ≤ X ≤ 400

Y =  X − 400, 400 < X ≤ 900 and the density function of X=
is f ( x) 0.001, 200 ≤ x ≤ 1200.
500, 900 < X ≤ 1200

400 900 1200


=
E (Y ) ∫200
0(0.001)dx + ∫
400
(x − 400)(0.001)dx + ∫
900
500(0.001)dx
900
( x − 400) 2
=+
0 0.001 + 500(0.001)(1200 − 900) =+
0 125 + 150 =275
2 400
400 900 1200
=
E (Y 2 ) ∫200
02 (0.001)dx + ∫
400
(x − 400) 2 (0.001)dx + ∫
900
5002 (0.001)dx
900
( x − 400)3
= 0 + 0.001 + 5002 (0.001)(1200 − 900) =
0 + 41, 666.67 + 75, 000 =
116, 666.67
3 400

Var=
(Y ) 116, 666.67 − 275
= 41, 041.67. 2

Page 67 of 125
230. Solution: D

Let X represent the loss.


The variance for a uniform distribution is the square of the interval length, divided by 12. Thus,
b2
Var ( X ) = .
12
Let C represent the claim payment from the loss. Then C = 0 for X < b/2 and C = X – b/2,
otherwise. Then,
b /2 b
E (C ) =∫ 0(1/ b)dx + ∫ ( x − b / 2)(1/ b)dx =0 + ( x − b / 2) 2 / (2b)
b
=(b / 2) 2 / (2b) =b / 8
0 b /2 b /2
b /2 b
E (C 2 ) =∫ 02 (1/ b)dx + ∫ ( x − b / 2) 2 (1/ b)dx =0 + ( x − b / 2)3 / (3b)
b
=(b / 2)3 / (3b) =b 2 / 24
0 b /2 b /2

Var (C ) = b 2 / 24 − (b / 8) 2 = 5b 2 /192.
The ratio is [5b 2 /192] / [b= 2
/12] 60 = /192 5 /16.

231. Solution: A
Let X be the profit random variable. Then, 0.05 0) P( Z < − µ / σ ) and from the table,
= P( X <=
−µ / σ = −1.645. From the problem, σ = µ . Therefore, −1.645 =
2 3
− µ / µ 3/2 =
− µ −1/2 and
=µ 1/1.645
= 2
0.37. in billions, or 370 million.

232. Solution: A

E[( X − 1)
= 2
] E[ X 2 ] − 2 E[ X ]=
+ 1 47 so E[ X ]= (61 + 1 − 47) / 2= 7.5 . The standard deviation is
E[ X 2 ] − E[ X ]2 = 61 − 7.52 = 2.18.

Page 68 of 125
233. Solution: D

Let D be the number of diamonds selected and S be the number of spades. First obtain the
hypergeometric probability S = 0:
 3 7
  
=   =
0 2  1(21) 7
P ( S= 0) = .
10  45 15
 
2
The required probability distribution is:
 2 3 5
   
P(=
D 0,= S 0) 1  0   0   2  15 1(1)(10) 10
P( D= 0 | S= 0)= = = =
P( S = 0) 7 /15 10  7 45 21
 
2
 2 35
   
P(=
D 1,= S 0) 1  1   0   1  15 2(1)(5) 10
P( D= 1| S= 0)
= = = =
P( S = 0) 7 /15 10  7 45 21
 
2
 2 3 5
   
P=( D 2,= S 0) 1  2   0   0  15 1(1)(1) 1
P ( D= 2 | S= 0)
= = = = .
P ( S = 0) 7 / 15 10  7 45 21
 
2
Then,
E(D | S = 0) =
0(10 / 21) + 1(10 / 21) + 2(1/ 21) = 12 / 21 = 4/7
E(D2 | S =
0) =
02 (10 / 21) + 12 (10 / 21) + 22 (1/ 21) =
14 / 21 =
2/3
Var ( D | S =
0) =
2 / 3 − (4 / 7) 2 =
50 /147 =
0.34.

234. – 236. DELETED

237. Solution: A

To be delayed over three minutes, either the car or the bus must arrive between 7:20 and 7:22.
The probability for each is 2/15. The probability they both arrive in that interval is (2/15)(2/15).
Thus, the probability of at least one being delayed is 2/15 + 2/15 – (2/15)(2/15) = 56/225 = 0.25.

Page 69 of 125
238. Solution: C

The probability that a skateboarder makes no more than two attempts is the probability of being
injured on the first or second attempt, which is p + (1 − p ) p = 2 p − p 2 . Then,
= F (2,=
0.0441 2) (2 p − p 2 ) 2
= 2 p − p2
0.21
p 2 − 2 p + 1 =0.79
( p − 1) 2 =
0.79
p − 1 =±0.88882
p = 0.11118.
The probability that a skateboarder makes no more than one attempt is p while the probability of
making no more than five attempts is the complement of having no injuries on the first five
attempts. Hence,
F (1,5) = p[1 − (1 − p )5 ] = 0.0495.

239. Solution: B

P( X =
3, Y ==
3)) F (3,3) − F (2,3) − F (3, 2) + F (2, 2) =
0.9360 − 0.8736 − 0.9300 + 0.8680 =
0.0004

240. Solution: D

Let X denote the number of deaths next year, and S denote life insurance payments next year.
Then S = 50,000X, where X ~ Bin(1000, 0.014). Therefore,
=E ( S ) E= = 700, 000
(50, 000 X ) 50, 000(1000)(0.014)
= =
Var ( D) Var = 34,510, 000, 000
(50, 000 X ) 50, 0002 (1000)(0.014)(0.986)
StdDev( S ) = 185, 769.
The 99th percentile is 700,000+185,769(2.326)= 1,132,099, which rounds to 1,150,000.

241. Solution: E

Let X k be the random change in month k. Then E ( =


X k ) (0.5)(1.1) + 0.5(−0.9)
= 0.1 and
1 . Let S = ∑ k =1 X k . Then, E(S) = 100(0.1) = 10 and
100
Var ( X=
k) 0.5(1.1) 2 + 0.5(−0.9) 2 − (0.1)
= 2

Var(S) = 100(1) = 100. Finally,


 −9 − 10 
P(100 + S > 91) = P( S > −9)  P  Z > = −1.9  = 0.9713.
 100 

Page 70 of 125
242. Solution: E

X has an exponential distribution with mean 8 and variance 64. The second moment is 128. The
mean and second moment of Z are both 0.45. Then (using the independence of X and Z),
=
E ( ZX ) E=( Z ) E ( X ) 0.45(8)
E=
[( ZX ) 2 ] E ( Z =
2
= 57.6
) E ( X 2 ) 0.45(128)
Var ( ZX ) = 57.6 − 3.62 = 44.64.

243. Solution: B

Each (x,y) pair has probability 1/25. There are only three possible benefit amounts:
0: Occurs only for the pair (0.0) and so the probability is 1/25.
50: Occurs for the three pairs (0,1), (1,0), and (1,1) and so the probability is 3/25.
100: Occurs in all remaining cases and so the probability is 21/25.
The expected value is 0(1/25) + 50(3/25) + 100(21/25) = 2250/25 = 90.

244. Solution: B

The marginal distribution for the probability of a given number of hospitalizations can be
calculated by adding the columns. Then p(0) = 0.915, p(1) = 0.072, p(2) = 0.012, and p(3) =
0.001. The expected value is 0.915(0) + 0.072(1) + 0.012(2) + 0.001(3) = 0.099.

245. Solution: E

Let S be the speed and X be the loss. Given S, X has an exponential distribution with mean 3X.
Then, noting that the variance of an exponential random variable is the square of the mean, the
variance of a uniform random variable is the square of the range divided by 12, and for any
random variable the second moment is the variance plus the square of the mean:
=
Var ( X ) Var[ E ( X | S )] + E[Var ( X | S )
= Var[3S ] + E (9 S 2 )
= 9(20 − 5) 2 /12 + 9[(20 − 5) 2 /12 + 12.52 ]
= 1743.75.

Page 71 of 125
246. Solution: C

The four possible outcomes for which X + Y = 3 are given below, with their probabilities.
2.33 e −2.3
(0,3) : e −1.7 = 2.0278e −4
3!
1.7e −1.7 2.32 e −2.3
(1, 2) : = 4.4965e −4
1! 2!
1.7 e 2.3 e −2.3
2 −1.7
(2,1) : = 3.3235e −4
2! 1!
3 −1.7
1.7 e
(3, 0) : e −2.3 = 0.8188e −4 .
3!
The conditional probabilities are found by dividing the above probabilities by their sum. They
are, 0.1901, 0.4215, 0.3116, 0.0768, respectively. These apply to the X – Y values of –3, –1, 1,
and 3. The mean is –3(0.1901) –1(0.4215) + 1(0.3116) + 3(0.0768) = –0.4498. The second
moment is 9(0.1901) + 1(0.4215) + 1(0.3116) + 9(0.0768) = 3.1352. The variance is 2.9329.

247. Solution: A

The marginal distribution of X has probability 1/5 + a at 0, 2a + b at 1, and 1/5 + b at 2. Due to


symmetry, the mean is 1 and so the variance is (0 − 1) 2 (1/ 5 + a ) + (1 − 0) 2 (1/ 5 + a )= 2 / 5 + 2a
which is minimized at a = 0. The marginal distribution of Y is the same as that of X and thus has
the same variance, 2/5 + 0 = 2/5.

248. Solution: C

Cov( X , Y ) =
E ( XY ) − E ( X ) E (Y ) =
E( X 3 ) − E( X )E( X 2 )
E (=
X ) E ( X=
3
) (1/ 3)(−1 + 0 +=
1) 0
=
E( X 2
) (1/ 3)(1 + 0=
+ 1) 2 / 3
Cov( X , Y ) =
0 − 0(2 / 3) =
0.
They are dependent, because
Pr( X= 0, Y= 0)= Pr( X= 0, X =2
0)= Pr( X= 0)= 1/ 3
Pr( X= 0) Pr(Y= 0)= (1/ 3)(1/ 3)= 1/ 9 ≠ 1/ 3.

249. Solution: B

Let X and Y be the two independent losses and Z = min(X,Y). Then,


Pr( Z > z=
) Pr( X > z and Y > z= ) e − z e −=
) Pr( X > z ) Pr(Y > z= z
e −2 z
FZ ( z ) =Pr( Z ≤ z ) =1 − Pr( Z > z ) =1 − e −2 z ,
which can be recognized as an exponential distribution with mean 1/2.

Page 72 of 125
250. Solution: B

Let X and Y be the miles driven by the two cars. The total cost, is then C = 3(X/15 + Y/30) =
0.2X + 0.1Y. C has a normal distribution with mean 0.2(25) + 0.1(25) = 7.5 and variance 0.04(9)
+ 0.01(9) = 0.45. Then, Pr(C < 7) = Pr( Z < (7 − 7.5) / 0.45 =−0.7454) = 0.23.

251. Solution: B

Let X denote the first estimate and Y the second. Then, Pr( X > 1.2Y ) = Pr( X − 1.2Y > 0). W = X
– 1.2Y has a normal distribution with mean 1(10b) – 1.2(10b) = –2b and variance
2.44b 2 . Then, Pr(W > 0)= Pr( Z > (0 + 2b) / 2.44b 2= 1.280)= 0.100.
12 b 2 + 1.22 b 2 =

252. Solution: C

Let µ be the common mean. Then the standard deviations of X and Y are 3µ and 4 µ
respectively. The mean and variance of (X + Y)/2 are then ( µ + µ ) / 2 =
µ and
25µ 2 / 4
[(3µ ) + (4 µ ) ] / 4 =
2 2
25µ / 4 respectively. The coefficient of variation is
2
= 5 / 2.
µ

253. Solution: D

Var(Z) = Var(3X + 2Y – 5) = 9Var(X) + 4Var(Y) = 9(3) + 4(4) = 43.

254. Solution: E

The mean is the weighted average of the three means: 0.1(20) + 0.3(15) + 0.6(10) = 12.5. The
second moment is the weighted average of the three second moments (each of which is the
square of the mean plus the mean, for a Poisson distribution): 0.1(420) + 0.3(240) + 0.6(110) =
180. The variance is the second moment minus the square of the mean, which is 23.75.

255. Solution: B

Let F be the number of fillings and R be the number of root canals. The total claim for a given
policyholder, C, in a year is C = 50F + 0.7(500R) = 50F + 350R.

We have E(F) = 0.6(0) + 0.2(1) + 0.15(2) + 0.05(3) = 0.65 and E(R) = 0.8(0) + 0.2(1) = 0.2.
Then, E(C) = 50(0.65) + 350(0.2) = 102.50.

Page 73 of 125
256. Solution: B

Due to the memoryless property of the exponential distribution, the distribution of the
reimbursement given that there is a payment is exponential with the same parameter. Thus
0.5 = F (6000) = 1 − e −6000/ λ which implies that λ = 8656.17 . The solution is
( ) ( )
F (9000) − F (3000) = 1 − e−9000/8656.17 − 1 − e −3000/8656.17 = 0.35.

257. Solution: E

Using the formulas for the variance and mean of the uniform distribution:
2
(100 − a ) 2  100 + a  1002 − 200a + a 2 + 3(100) 2 + 600a + 3a 2
E ( X ) = Var ( X ) + E ( X ) =
2 2
+  =
12  2  12
40, 000 + 400a + 4a 2 19, 600
= =
12 3
0= 40, 000 − 78, 400 + 400a + 4a 2
0= a 2 + 100a − 9, 600
0 =− (a 60)(a + 160)
a = 60
Then, Y is uniform on the interval 1.25(60) = 75 to 100. The 80th percentile is 75 + 0.8(25) = 95.

258. Solution: C

Using a Venn Diagram (calling the risk factors A, B, C) we get 400 + 300 + X + Y = 1000 (circle
A), 400 + 300 + X + Z = 1000 (circle B), 400 + 300 + Y + Z= 1000 (circle C). Using the first 2
equations we get Y = Z, and using the second 2 equations we get X = Y. Thus X = Y = Z = 150,
and so the total number of participants is 3(400) + 3(150) + 300 + 500 = 2450.

Page 74 of 125
259. Solution: C

Consider the following events about a randomly selected auto insurance customer:
A = customer insures more than one car
B = customer insures a sports car
We want to find the probability of the complement of A intersecting the complement of B
(exactly one car, non-sports). We have P( Ac ∩ B c ) = 1 − P( A ∪ B) .
By the Additive Law, P ( A ∪ B )= P ( A) + P( B) − P( A ∩ B) .
P ( A ∪ B ) = P ( A) + P ( B ) – P ( A ∩ B ).
By the Multiplicative Law, P ( A= ∩ B ) P ( B | A= = 0.096 .
) P ( A) 0.15(0.64)
Then, P ( A ∪ B ) = 0.64 + 0.20 − 0.096 = 0.744 .
Finally, P( Ac ∩ B c ) =
1 − 0.744 =
0.256 .

260. Solution: E

The number of applicants with diabetes has a binomial distribution and thus
5
 200 
P( X ≤ 5) = ∑  x
(0.01) (0.99)
200 − x
= 0.134 + 0.271 + 0.272 + 0.181 + 0.090 + 0.036 = 0.984 .
x =0  x 
A faster solution is to use the Poisson distribution with λ − 200(0.01) = 2 as an approximation.
5
e −2 2 x  1 2 4 8 16 32 
Then, P( X ≤ =
5) ∑ x != e−2  1 + 1 + 2 + 6 + 24 + 120= 0.983 .
x =0

261. Solution: C

The number of sales has a binomial distribution with n = 5 and p = 0.2. Then,
5 5
P( X ≥ 2) =1 − P ( X ≤ 1) =1 −   (0.2)0 (0.8)5 −   (0.2)1 (0.8) 4 =1 − 0.328 − 0.410 =0.262 .
0 1

262. Solution: C

The number of defective computers has a binomial distribution with n = 100 and p unknown. We
have
P ( X= 3)= P ( X= 2)
100  3 100  2
 p (1 −=
p )97 2   p (1 − p )
98

 3   2 
=
161, 700 p 2(4,950)(1 − p )
171, 600 p = 9,900
= =
p 9,900 /171, 600 0.058

Page 75 of 125
263. Solution: B

P(fire damage and no theft) = 0.2(1 – 0.3) = 0.14


P(no fire damage and theft) = (1 – 0.2)(0.3) = 0.24
P(exactly one) = 0.14 + 0.24 = 0.38

264. Solution: C

Let C be the event that the employee contributes to a supplemental retirement plan and let F be
the event that the employee is female. Then, by Bayes’ Theorem,
P(C | F ) P( F ) 0.2(0.45)
= P( F | C ) = = 0.353.
P(C | F ) P( F ) + P(C | F ) P( F ) 0.2(0.45) + 0.3(0.55)
c c

265. Solution: D

Let C be the event that no claim is filed and X be the event that the policyholder is from territory
X. Then, by Bayes’ Theorem,
P(C | X ) P( X ) 0.15 P( X )
P( X | C ) = .
P(C | X ) P( X ) + P(C | X ) P( X ) 0.15 P( X ) + 0.4[1 − P( X )]
c c

From the law of total probability,


0.2 =P(C ) =P(C | X ) P( X ) + P (C )[1 − P( X )]
= 0.15 P( X ) + 0.4[1 − P( X )]
0.4 −=
0.2 P( X )[0.4 − 0.15]
= =
P( X ) 0.2 / 0.25 0.8.
Then,
0.15(0.8)
=
P( X | C ) = 0.6.
0.2

266. Solution: C

The probability that a single claim is less than 25 is


25
P( X =
< 25) ∫10
x −2 dx 3 5.
10=

The probability that all three claims are less than 25 is (3 / 5)3 = 27 /125.

267. Solution: D

The distribution function of an exponential distribution with mean 0.5 is F ( x) = 1 − e−2 x .


Pr( X > 0.7) e−1.4
Pr( X > 0.7 | X > 0.4) = = = e −0.6 = 0.549. This can be more efficiently solved
Pr( X > 0.4) e−0.8
using the memoryless property: Pr( X > 0.7 | X > 0.4) = Pr( X > 0.3) = e −0.6 = 0.549.

Page 76 of 125
268. Solution: D

Let X be the number of years in which a payment of 20 is received. X has a binomial distribution
with n = 5 and p = 0.5. Let p(x) be the probability of x payments. The expected payment is
0 p (0) + 20 p (1) + 40 p (2) + 60[1 − p (0) − p (1) − p (2)]
=0(1/ 32) + 20(5 / 32) + 40(10 / 32) + 60(16 / 32) =45.625.

269. Solution: E
The mean of the sum is 10 + 12 = 22. The standard deviation of the sum is 32 + 42 = 5 . The
probability the sum is less than 29 is the probability a standard normal random variable is less
than (29 – 22)/5 = 1.4, which is 0.9192.

270. Solution: C

The variance of the total is the sum of the variances: 1 + 1 + 2.25 + 4 = 8.25. The standard
deviation is the square root, 2.87.

271. Deleted

272 Deleted

273. Deleted

274. Deleted: D

Consider the following events about a randomly selected auto insurance customer:
A = customer insures more than one car
B = customer insures a sports car
We want to find the probability of the complement of A intersecting the complement of B
(exactly one car, non-sports).
Then,
P( Ac ∩ B c ) =
1 − P( A ∪ B)
=1 − [ P( A) + P( B) − P( A ∩ B)
P( A =
∩ B) P( B | A) P = = 0.124
( A) 0.2(0.62)
P( Ac ∩ B c ) =
1 − [0.62 + 0.15 − 0.124] =
0.354.

275. Deleted

276. Deleted

277. Deleted

278. Deleted

Page 77 of 125
279. Deleted

280. Deleted

281. Deleted

282. Deleted

283. Deleted

284. Solution: D

X follows an exponential distribution with mean 20 5 and variance (20 5) 2 = 2000. Then,
Cov [ X , Y ]
= Var [ X ] =
Var [Y ] Corr [ X , Y ] 2000 12,500 ( 0.2 ) 1000 .
=
It follows that
Var [ X + Y ]= Var [ X ] + Var [Y ] + 2Cov [ X , Y ]= 2000 + 12,500 + 2 (1000 )= 16,500 .

285. Solution: D

Let X be the number of appraisals below θ. X is binomial with n = 4, p = 0.75.


We need exactly 1, 2 or 3 successes for the event L < θ < H to occur. The probability is
P( X =+1) P( X =+ 2) P( X = 3) =
 4 3  4 2  4
  (0.75) (0.25) +   (0.75) (0.25) +   (0.75) (0.25) = 0.0469 + 0.2109 + 0.4219 =
1 2 3 1

1  2  3
0.6797.

286. Solution: E

e − x ; the probability that the second loss is more than twice


If the first loss is X, then P( X > x) =
e −2 x . . Thus, the probability that the second loss is more than twice the
X, would be P( X > 2 x) =

first loss is ∫ e −2 x e − x dx = 13 due to independence. By symmetry, the probability that the first loss
0
is more than twice the second loss is also 1/3. Thus, the answer is 2/3.

Page 78 of 125
287. Solution: C

This is binomial where X is the number defective and n = 100. We want P ( X= 3)= 2 P ( X= 2).

100  3 100  2
 ( p) (1=
− p)97 2   ( p) (1 − p)
98

 3   2 
100*99*98 100*99
= ( p) 2 (1 − p )
3* 2*1 2*1
98
p= (1 − p)
6
6
p = 0.05769.
=
104

288. Solution: D

Let WP denote the event “Woman is Pregnant”, WNP the event “Woman is Not Pregnant”, and
TP the event “Test Shows Pregnancy”. Using Bayes Theorem:

P(TP | WP) * P(WP)


P(WP | TP) =
P(TP | WP) * P(WP) + P(TP | WNP) * P(WNP)
(1 − 0.1)(0.2) 0.18
= = = 0.5294
(1 − 0.1)(0.2) + (0.2)(1 − 0.2) 0.34

289. Solution: A

The probability function of Y, the amount paid in thousands, is

0.72 y=0
0.14 y = 200

p( y ) = 
0.06 y = 400
0.08 y = 500

E(Y) = 200 * 0.14 + 400 * 0.06 + 500 * 0.08 = 28 + 24 + 40 = 92


E(Y2) = 2002 * 0.14 + 4002 * 0.06 + 5002 * 0.08 = 35200
Var(Y) = E(Y2) – (E(Y))2 = 35200 – 922 = 26736
SD(Y)=26,7360.5 = 163.5115

Page 79 of 125
290. Solution: B

0.5 x=0
p( x) = 
0.5 x=2
E( X ) = 1
Var( X ) = 1
=
By the Central Limit Theorem: =
E( S ) 100, Var ( S ) 100.
 115 − 100 
P[ S > 115] = P  Z >  = P[ Z > 1.5] = 0.0668.
 100 

291. Solution: C

E(X) = 0.25*1 + 0.375*1 = 0.625


E(Y) = 0.125*1 + 0.375 = 0.500
E(XY) = P[X = 1, Y = 1] = 0.375
Var(X) = 0.625 – 0.6252 = 0.234
Var(Y) = 0.5 – 0.52 = 0.25
Cov(X,Y)=E(XY)-E(X)E(Y) = 0.375 – 0.625*0.500 = 0.0625
Corr(X,Y) = 0.0625/(0.234*0.25)1/2 = 0.258

292. Solution: B

6 / 21 y=0
5 / 21 y =1

4 / 21 y=2
p( y ) = 
3 / 21 y=3
2 / 21 y=4

1/ 21 y=5

E(Y) = 0*6/21 + 1*5/21 + 2*4/21 + 3*3/21 + 4*2/21 + 5*1/21 = 1.67


E(Y2) = 0*6/21 + 1*5/21 + 4*4/21 + 9*3/21 + 16*2/21 + 25*1/21 = 5
Var(Y) = 5 – (1.67)2 = 2.22

Page 80 of 125
293. Solution: D

Let W = X + Y. Then W has the probability function:


w p(w)
0 0.9729
40 0.02
80 0.002
200 0.004
240 0.001
400 0.0001
For instance, the event {W = 200} is the union of the events {X = 200, Y = 0} and
{X = 0, Y = 200}.
It follows that E(W) = 2.04, E(W2) = 278.4, and Var (W) = 274.24. Taking the square root gives
the standard deviation of 16.56.

294. Solution: B

E [X] = (0.3) (0.18) + (0.50) (0.08) + (0.20) (−0.13) = 0.068


E [Y] = (0.3) (0.15) + (0.50) (0.08) + 0(.20) (−0.06) = 0.068

V [X] = 0.3 (0.18 − 0.068)2 + .5 (0.08 − 0.068)2 + 0.2 (−0.13 − 0.068)2 = .01168
V [Y] = 0.3 (0.15 − 0.068)2 + .5 (0.07 − 0.068)2 + 0.2 (−0.06 − 0.068)2 = .00529

So X has a larger variance, but the means are equal.

295. Solution: D

Using the independence of the purchases P(exactly 3 customers purchase)


= 3(0.5)2 (0.5)(0.1) + (0.5)3 (0.9) = 0.15, and P(4 purchases = (0.5)3 (0.1) = 0.0125.
So P(at most 2) = 1 − P(3) − P(4) = 0.1625 = 0.8375.

296. Solution: A

Let x be the number of policies on male nonsmokers, and let y be the number of policies on
female smokers (to be determined). Then, by condition (ii), the number of policies on female
nonsmokers is 100 + x, so that the total number of policies on females is 100 + x + y. Next, by
condition (iii), the number of policies on male smokers is 350 − y, so that the number of policies
on males is 350 − y + x. Now, by condition (i), we have

350 − y + x = 150 + (100 + x + y).

After simplification, we obtain: 100 = 2y, which produces y = 50, the number of female smokers.

Page 81 of 125
297. Solution: C

Let the random variable X be the future lifetime of a machine part. We know that the density of
X has the form f (x) = C(10 + x)−2 for 0 < x < 40 (and it is equal to zero otherwise). First,
determine the proportionality constant C from the condition ∫ 040 f ( x)dx = 1:
40 2
1= ∫0 f ( x)dx =
− C (10 + x) −1 |040 =
25
C
so that C = 25/2 = 12.5. Then,
5
∫ 12.5(10 + x) dx =
−2
P ( X < 5) = − 12.5(10 + x) −1 |50 =
−0.8333 + 1.25 =
0.4167.
0

298. Solution: A

E(X) = 0(0.5) + 1(0.2) + 2(0.3) = 0.8


E(X2) = 02(0.5) + 12(0.2) + 22(0.3) = 1.4,
Var(X) = E(X2) - (E(X))2 = 1.4 − (0.8)2 = 0.76

The premium on a policy is 125% of 0.8, which is 1. The total premium on 76 policies is thus
76. Let Y be the total claim on 76 policies. By the Central Limit Theorem Y has approximately a
normal distribution with mean (76)(0.8) = 60.8 and variance 76(0.76) = 57.76. Consequently,
 76 − 60.8 
P(Y > 76) ≈ P(Z > P[Y > 76] = P  Z > = 2  , where Z is the standard normal random
 57.76 
variable. The answer is 1 − Φ (2) = 0.0228.

299. Solution: C

e − λA λ 0
For Group A: P[ X =0] =0.70 = ⇒ λ A =0.3567
0!
e − λB λ 0
For Group B: P[ X =0] =0.90 = ⇒ λB =0.1054
0!
e− λC λ 0
For Group C: P[ X =0] =0.50 = ⇒ λC =0.6931
0!
Then, 20, 000 × 0.3567 + 45, 000 × 0.1054 + 35, 000 × 0.6931 =
36,136

Page 82 of 125
300. Solution: E

e −0.288 0.2880
P=( 0 claims ) = 0.750
0!
−0.288
e 0.2881
P (1 claim ) = 0.216
=
1!
For three years the probability of 0 or 1 claim is
( 0.75) + ( 13 ) ( 0.75) ( 0.216 ) =
P ( 0 in 3 years)+P(1 in 3 years ) =
3 2
0.79.
Alternatively, the number of claims in three years has a Poisson distribution with mean 3(0.288)
= 0. 864. The probability of 0 or 1 claims is
e −0.864 0.8640 e −0.864 0.8641
+ =
0.79.
0! 1!

301. Solution: E

Var(Total) = Var(Fire) + Var(Theft) + 2Cov(Fire, Theft) = 5 + 8 + 2(3) = 19.

302. Solution: A

Let X 1 , X 2 , X 3 denote the number of accidents in days 1, 2, and 3, respectively.


Then, each has Poisson distribution with mean 4. Since the X i s are assumed to be independent,
X = X 1 + X 2 + X 3 has a Poisson distribution with mean 3(4) = 12. Then,
e −12120 e −12121
P [ X < 2] = P [ X =0] + P [ X =1] = + =13e −12 .
0! 1!

303. Solution: C

1 1 1
The probability of success is p = P( HHH ) + P(TTT ) = + = .
8 8 4
For the first success to be on the third experiment we need two failures followed by one success.
The probability is (3/4)(3/4)(1/4) = 9/64 = 0.141.

304. Solution: E

P[At least one Company P truck]:

P[P and (Q or R)]+P[(R or Q) and P]+P[P and P]


 4  5   4  3 
= 2    +    = 0.72.
 9  8   9  8 
Alternatively, take the complement of having no Company P trucks:
1 – (5/9)(4/8) = 0.72.

Page 83 of 125
305. Solution: B

e −3 30 e −3 31
P ( Less than 2 Errors ) = + =4e −3 =0.199
0! 1!
 50 − 45 
P ( Time < 50 ) = P  Z <  = P ( Z < 0.5 ) = 0.6915
 10 
Due to independence of errors and time, the probability is
0.199*0.6915 = 0.1376.

306. Solution: C

H: Home Renter
A: Apartment Renter

Let T be time from purchase to cancellation. We are looking for P[ H ]T > 1] .


1 − 14 t 1
Now P (T > 1=H) ∫ e = and P (T > 1= A) ∫ e =
∞ ∞1 − t
−1 4
dt e 2
dt e −1 2 . .
1 4 1 2

P ( H ) P (T > 1 H )
Using Bayes’ Theorem, P ( H T > 1) =
P ( A ) P (T > 1 A ) + P ( H ) P (T > 1 H )
0.4e − 0.25
= 0.4612.
0.6e − 0.5 + 0.4e − 0.25

307. Solution: B

n
Let S n = ∑ X i and S =
Sn
, where the X i are the yearly benefit amounts. Then,
i =1 n
S n − 2475n S − 2475
=Z = is N(0,1) because the sum of independent normal variables is also
250 n 250 / n
normal. Then,
 2500 − 2475 
P ( S ≤ 2500 ) =P  Z < (
 =P Z < 0.1 n =0.99 )
 250 n 
( So, 0.1 n = 2.32634
= =
n 541.19, so use n 542.
The solution must be rounded up to 542 or the probability will be slightly less than 0.99.

Page 84 of 125
308. Solution: D

Let Y be the amount paid out. The amount is 0 if the policyholder lives less than 1 year or more
than 5 years. The amount is 1000 otherwise. Then,

0.57, y=0
p( y ) = 
0.43, y = 1000

E (Y ) =
0 ( 0.57 ) + 1000 ( 0.43) =
430
E (Y 2 ) =
02 ( 0.57 ) + 10002 ( 0.43) =
430, 000
Var (Y=
) 430, 000 − 430=2 245,100
SD(Y ) = 495.

309. Solution: E

The solution uses Bayes’ Theorem.


Denote the event of Zone A by A, etc.
Denote the event of a fire occurring by F.
P ( F ) = P ( F A) P ( A) + P ( F B ) P ( B ) + P ( F C ) P ( C )
=0.015*0.4 + 0.011*0.35 + 0.008*0.25
= 0.01185.
Then P ( A F ) = P ( F A ) * P ( A ) P ( F )
= 0.015*0.4
= 0.01185 0.5063.

Page 85 of 125
310. Solution: D

Under plan 1 the expected payment is


4 10
4 x 10 x x3 4x2
P1 = ∫ x ⋅ dx + ∫ 4 ⋅ dx = +
0 50 4 50 150 0 100 4

64  400 − 64  1136
= + == 3.786667
150  100  300
Under plan 2,
x x
P2 = ∫ 0 ⋅ dx + ∫ ( x − 4 ) ⋅ dx
4 10

0 50 4 50
10
10 x2 4x x3 x 2  1000   64 16 
= ∫ 4
− dx =
50 50

150 25
= 
 150
− 4 −  − 
  150 25 
4

8 32 432
=+ = = 2.88
3 150 150
So P1 −
= P2 3.78666 − 2.88
= 0.906667 .

311. Solution: C

Let Z = X – Y. The probabilities for Z are:


p(0) = 2/31 (when x = 1 and y = 1, that is (1,1))
p(1) = 6/31 (for (1,0) and (2,1))
p(2) = 14/31 (for (2,0) and (3,1))
p(3) = 9/31 (for (3,0))
Then.
1 61
E ( Z= ) [ 2(0) + 6(1) + 14(2) + 9(3)=] ,
31 31
1 143
E(Z= 2
)  2(02 ) + 6(12 ) + 14(22 ) + 9(32=
)  , and
31 31
143  61  4433 − 3721 712
2

and so Var( Z ) = −   = = = 0.7409 .


31  31  312 961

312. Solution: D

= =
M medical, P property
=
P[ M ] 0.30,= P[ P] 0.42, P[ M=
∪ P] 0.60
Therefore, P[ M= ∩ P] 0.12 (0.30 + 0.42 −
= 0.60 0.12)
P[Exactly 1] 0.48
P[Exactly 1 | Not Both]= = = 0.54545.
P[Not Both] 0.88

Page 86 of 125
313. Solution: B

P[Reports Property Claim in Year 9]=1.258 * P[Reports Property Claim in Year 1]


P[Reports Liability Claim in Year 9]=0.758 * P[Reports Liability Claim in Year 1]

0.01 *(1.25)8 x (0.75) 8 = 0.005967

314. Solution: B

Define: N = # of claims reported in a year by a policyholder


F = event of a first-year policyholder
e −0.5 0.50
P  N ≥ 1 F ]=1 − P[ N < 1 F ]= 1 − P[ N = 0 | F  =1− = 0.393 47
0!
e−0.2 0.20
P  N ≥ 1 F C ]= 1 − P[ N < 1 F C ]= 1 − P[ N = 0 | FC  = 1− = 0.18127
  0!
P[ N ≥ 1| F ]P[ F ]
Pr[F | N ≥1] = P[ F | N ≥ 1] =
P[ N ≥ 1| F ]P[ F ] + P[ N ≥ 1| F C ]P[ F C ]
(0.39347)(0.15)
= = 0.27696
(0.39347)(0.15) + (0.18127)(0.85)

315. Solution: B

P[min(Y1 , Y2 ) > e16 ] = P[Y1 > e16 , Y2 > e16 ] = P[Y1 > e16 ]P[Y2 > e16 ] due to independence.
 16 − 16   16 − 15 
P[Y1 > e16 ]P[Y2 > e16 ]= P[ X 1 > 16]P[ X 2 > 16]= P  Z >  P Z >
 1.5   2 
= P[ Z > 0]P[ Z > 0.5] = 0.5(1 − 0.6916) = 0.15425.

316. Solution: C

P( A) + P( B) + P(C ) =
1
5P(C ) + 4P(C ) + P(C ) =
1
P(C ) = 0.1
P( B) = 0.4
P( A) = 0.5

P ( C ∩ 0 Claims ) P ( 0 Claims C ) ⋅ P ( C )
P ( C 0 Claims )
= =
P ( 0 Cliaims ) P ( 0 Claims|A ) ⋅ P ( A ) + P ( 0 Claims B ) ⋅ P ( B ) + P ( 0 Claims|C ) ⋅ P ( C )
( 0.4 )(=0.1) 0.04
= 0.235
( 0.1)( 0.5) + ( 0.2 )( 0.4 ) + ( 0.4 )( 0.1) 0.05 + 0.08 + 0.04

Page 87 of 125
317. Solution: B

Let Y be the random variable for the benefit.

0.01, y = 25, 000


0.99(0.01), y = 20, 000

0.992 (0.01), y = 15, 000
p( y) =  3
0.99 (0.01), y = 10, 000
0.994 (0.01), y = 5, 000

1 − above, y= 0

25000 ( 0.01) + 20000 ( 0.99 )( 0.01) + 15000 ( 0.99 ) ( 0.01) + 10000 ( 0.99 ) ( 0.01) + 5000 ( 0.99 ) ( 0.01)
E[Y ] =
2 3 4

= 740

318. Solution: C

Let WP = Woman Pregnant


WNP = Woman Not Pregnant
TP = Test Shows Pregnancy (Positive)

Using Bayes Theorem:

P (TP | WP ) P (WP )
P (WP | TP ) =
P (TP | WP ) P (WP ) + P (TP | WNP ) P (WNP )

=
( 0.90 )( 0.30 ) = 0.27 0.27
= = 0.6585
( 0.90 )( 0.30 ) + ( 0.20 )( 0.70 ) 0.27 + 0.14 0.41

319. Solution: C

P ( exactly 3)
= ( 3)( 0.70 ) ( 0.30 )( 0.20 ) + ( 0.70 ) ( 0.80 )
2 3

= 0.0882 + 0.2744 = 0.3626


P ( exactly 4 )
= (=
0.70 ) ( 0.20 )
3
0.0686
P ( at most 2 ) =
1 − 0.3626 − 0.0686 =
0.5688

Page 88 of 125
320. Solution: A

=
Mean = 100, 000
of sum 100(1000)
= 100 ( 400 )
=
2
Standard deviation of sum 4, 000
92, 000 − 100, 000 
P ( X < 92, 000
= ) P  Z < =  P ( Z < −=
2 ) 0.0228
 4000 

321. Solution: A

Let X be the number of non-defective items in a randomly chosen box of 50 items.


Then X − Binomial ( 50, 1 − p ) and P(at least t * non-defective items in the box of 50 items)

= P ( X ≥ t * )= ∑ ( ) (1 − p ) ( p )
50
50 t 50 −t
t and we want this probability to be at
t =t *

least 0.95 ⇒ A is correct.

322. Solution: E

1
X has a negative binomial probability distribution, where r = 3 and p = . The probability
6
5
3 
 x − 1 r y − r r (1 − p )  6  90.
function is: p ( x) =   p q . The variance for this is Var=
(X ) = =
 r −1 
2 2
p 1
 
6

323. Solution: C

P ( 3 products )
= ( 0.45)( 0.55)( 0.60 )( 0.40 ) + ( 0.55)( 0.55)( 0.60 )( 0.60 )
+ ( 0.45 )( 0.45 )( 0.60 )( 0.60 ) + ( 0.45 )( 0.55 )( 0.40 )( 0.60 ) =
0.3006
P ( 4 products ) (=
= 0.45 )( 0.55 )( 0.60 )( 0.60 ) 0.0891
P ( 3 or 4 ) = 0.3006 + 0.0891 = 0.3897

324. Solution: B

The total number of accidents has mean 1600(4) = 6400 and variance 1600(4) = 6400. Using the
Central Limit Theorem,
 1600   6496 − 6400 
P  ∑ X i ≥ 6496  ≈ P  Ζ ≥  = P ( Ζ ≥ 1.2 ) = 1 − 0.8849 = 0.1151 .
 i =1   80 

Page 89 of 125
325. Solution: A

Let H − health
L − life
R − retirement
a (H ∩ L) =
= b (H ∩ R ) =
c (L ∩ R )
a+b = 0.625
a+c = 0.375
b + c = 0.500
( b + c ) + ( a + c ) − ( a + b ) = 2c = 0.500 + 0.375 − 0.625 = 0.25
c = 0.125

326. Solution: B

This is an exponential distribution with mean 20 and standard deviation 20. So, we want:

1 1
30 1 − 20 x − x 30

∫10 20
e dx =
e 20
10
−e − 1.5 + e − 0.5 =
= 0.3834

327. Solution: C

Average of 100 claims is normal with mean 2500 and standard deviation 500 100 = 50 .
P( X < K ) =
0.99
 K − 2500 
PZ < = 0.99
 50 
K − 2500
= 2.32635
50
K = 2616

328. Solution: B

Var[1.03X + 2.5] = (1.03)2Var[X] = (1.03) 2(50) = 53.045

Page 90 of 125
329. Solution: C

L: left-handed child
0LP: no left-handed parents
1LP: one left-handed parent
2LP: two left-handed parents

P ( L | 2 LP ) = 1/ 2
P ( L |1LP ) = 1/ 6
P ( L | 0 LP ) = 1/16
P (2 LP ) = 1/ 50
P (1LP ) = 1/ 5
P (0 LP ) =1 − 1/ 50 − 1/ 5 =
39 / 50
P ( L | 0 LP ) P (0 LP )
P (0 LP | L) =
P ( L | 0 LP ) P (0 LP ) + P ( L |1LP ) P (1LP ) + P ( L | 2 LP ) P (2 LP )
(1/16)(39 / 50) 3(39) 117
= = = 0.529
(1/16)(39 / 50) + (1/ 6)(1/ 5) + (1/ 2)(1/ 50) 3(39) + 8(10) + (24)(1) 221

330. Solution: E

(Z )
Var= Var ( 4 X − Y
= − 3) (4) 2Var ( X ) + ( − 1) 2Var
= (Y ) (16 )( 2 ) =
+ 3 35

331. Solution: A

Let H = health insurance; D =disability income insurance


x y z
Then P(H)= ; P(D) = ; P(H and not D)=
100 100 100
k
Let P(H and D) =
100
Since, P(H) = P(H and not D) + P(H and D),
x= z+k
⇒k = x−z

Since P(D) = P(D and not H) + P(D and H),


P(D and not H) = P(D) – P(D and H)
y k y − ( x − z) y − x + z
P(D and not H) = − = =
100 100 100 100

Page 91 of 125
332. Solution: B

The first die can be any number, so 6 possibilities. If the second die matches (1 possibility) then
the third die must not match (5 possibilities). Hence this outcome can occur 6(1)(5) = 30 ways. A
second outcome is the second die does not match (5 possibilities), in which case the third die
must match one of the first two (2 possibilities), for an additional 60 ways. The desired
probability is then 90/216 = 0.417.

333. Solution: D

Hypergeometric:

10   7 
  
 3  =3  75
= 0.33937
17  221
 
6

334. Solution: A

P(M) = 0.6
P(F) = 0.4
P(S|M) = 0.20
P(F|S) = 0.20

P( S | F ) P( F )
P( F | S ) =
P( S | F ) P( F ) + P( S | M ) P( M )
P ( S | F )(0.4) 0.2(0.2)(0.6)
=
0.2 ⇒ P ( S |=F) = 0.75
P ( S | F )(0.4) + 0.2(0.6) 0.4 − 0.2(0.4)

335. Solution: E

Hypergeometric:

 8  2 8 2
   +   
 2   1  = 3   0  56 + 56
= 0.9333
10  120
 
3

Page 92 of 125
336. Solution: C

Let d be the deductible. Assume d < 100 because the expected claim needs to be positive.

The claim is 0 with probability d/100 (i.e. when the loss does not exceed d), and uniformly
distributed over [0, 100 - d] with probability (100 - d)/100 (i.e. when the loss exceeds d).

Note that the probability that a uniformly distributed random variable is in an interval is
proportional to the length of the interval; the expected value is halfway between the minimum
and maximum possible values of the uniformly distributed random variable.

0 + (100 − d ) 100 − d d
=32 E=
[Claim] [ * ] + [0* ]
2 100 100

Solving for d gives d = 20 or d = 180; disregard d = 180 > 100.

337. Solution: D

Let Y represent the loss and X represent the claim. Note that X = 0 if Y ≤ 3; otherwise,
X = Y - 3.

E[ X ]= P(Y ≤ 3) E[ X | Y ≤ 3) + P(Y > 3) E[ X | Y > 3)


= P (Y ≤ 3)(0) + P (Y > 3) E[Y − 3 | Y > 3]
y
∞ −
e 10
= 0+ ∫ dy * E[Y ] since exponentials are memoryless.
3
10
3

=10e 10 .

338. Solution: B

R = # of root canals, F = # of fillings, p(r, f) = P(R = r, F = f)


P(R = r | F is at most 1)
= P(R = r | F = 0 or 1)
= P(R = r AND F = 0 or 1) / P(F = 0 or 1)
= [p(r, 0) + p(r, 1)] /[p(0, 0) + p(0, 1) + p(1, 0) + p(1, 1) + p(2, 0) + p(2, 1)]

P(R = 0 | F = 0 or 1) = (0.40 + 0.26) / (0.40 + 0.26 + 0.04 + 0.03 + 0.01 + 0.01) = 22/25
P(R = 1 | F = 0 or 1) = (0.04 + 0.03) / (0.40 + 0.26 + 0.04 + 0.03 + 0.01 + 0.01) = 7/75
P(R = 2 | F = 0 or 1) = (0.01 + 0.01) / (0.40 + 0.26 + 0.04 + 0.03 + 0.01 + 0.01) = 2/75

 7   2  11
E[ R | F ≤ 1] = 1  + 2   = = 0.14667 .
 75   75  75

Page 93 of 125
339. Solution: A

N is Binomial, n=500, p=0.12, q=0.88

Standard deviation = 500(0.12)(0.88) = 7.26636

340. Solution: E

x x
∫ 2t dt =
−3
F ( x) = −t −2 =
1 − x −2
1 1
F (4) = 15 /16
F (3) = 8 / 9
Pr(3 ≤ X < 4) F (4) − F (3) 15 /16 − 8 / 9 135 − 128 7
Pr( X < 4 | X ≥ 3) = = = = = = 0.4375
Pr( X ≥ 3) 1 − F (3) 1− 8 / 9 144 − 128 16

341. Solution: B

30
=1 ∫0 k ( x + 5) 2 dx

− k ( x + 5) −1
1= 30
0

 1 1
1= −k  − 
 35 5 
1 = k (0.171429)
k = 5.8333
10 5.8333
∫5 ( x + 5) 2
dx = 0.1944

Page 94 of 125
342. Solution: B

e− λ λ 0 e− λ λ1
=
F (1) +
0! 1!
−λ 0
e λ e λ e−λ λ 2
−λ 1
F (2) = + +
0! 1! 2!
λ2
1+ λ +
F (2) 2= 13 26
= =
F (1) 1+ λ 5 10
10 + 10λ + 5λ 2 =26 + 26λ
5λ 2 − 16λ − 16 =0
(5λ + 4)(λ − 4) =0
λ= 4= E ( X ).
Ignore negative solution.

343. Solution: B

P[X ≥ 0] = 1
P[X ≥ 1] = 0.5
P[X ≥ 2] = 0.27639
P[X ≥ 3] = 0.18377
P[X ≥ 4] = 0.11270
P[X ≥ 5] = 0.05279

0.5, x=0
0.22361, x =1

0.09262, x=2
p( x) = 
0.07107, x=3
0.05991, x=4

0.05279, x=5

5
=
E( X ) ∑=
xi p ( xi ) 1.12565
i =0

Page 95 of 125
344. Solution: B

Let g ( y ) represent the density function for the median.


=
g ( y ) 6( y 2 )(1 − y 2 )(2 y )
= 12( y 3 − y 5 )
1
E (Y )= ∫
0
yg ( y )dy= 12( 1 5 − 1 7 )= 24
35

1
E (Y 2 )= ∫ 0
y 2 g ( y )dy= 12( 1 6 − 1 8 )= 1
2

Var (Y ) =( 1 2 ) − ( 24 35) =0.030 2

345. Solution: A

W – T has a normal distribution with mean 0 and variance 4 + 12 = 16.

P ( W − T < 1) = P(−1 < W − T < 1)

= P(−1 < N (0,16) < 1) = P(−.25 < N (0,1) < .25) = 0.197

346. Solution: B

The only way exactly two of the events can occur is if A and B both occur. Hence
P[ A ∩ B] =0.06.
Because the intersections of A and C and of B and C are empty,
0.90= P[ A ∪ B ∪ C ]= P[ A] + P[ B] + P[C ] − P[ A ∩ B].
The probability of exactly one of A and B is P[ A] + P[ B] − 2 P[ A ∩ B] =
0.38.
Therefore, P[ A] + P[ B] − P[ A ∩ B]= 0.38 + 0.06= 0.44.
Then, P[C] = 0.90 – 0.44 = 0.46.

347. Solution: D

0.91, y = 0
p( y) = 
0.09, y = 1
E (Y ) = (0)(0.91) + (1)(0.09) = 0.09
E (Y 2 ) = (02 )(0.91) + (12 )(0.09) = 0.09
V (Y ) =0.09 − 0.092 =0.0819
=
SD (Y ) =0.0819 0.28618
0.28618
=
CV (Y ) = 3.179797
.09

Page 96 of 125
348. Solution: E

The policyholder will receive benefits if and only if at least 1 of the 3 losses exceeds 30.
The probability that a given loss exceeds 30 is (100 - 30)/100 = 0.7.

The probability that no losses exceed 30 is (1 − 0.7)3 = 0.027.


The probability that at least one loss exceeds 30 is 1 – 0.027 = 0.973.

349. Solution: B

P[ J ] = 0.70
P[ F ] = 0.50
P[ F | J ] = 2 P[ F | J c ]
P= = P[ F | J ]P[ J ] + P[ F | J c ]P[ J c ]
[ F ] 0.50
=0.50 P[ F | J ]0.70 + 0.50 P[ F | J ]0.30
P[ F=| J ] 0.50 / (0.70 + 0.25)
= 0.58824
P[ F ∩ J ] =P[ F | J ]P[ J ]
=
P[ F ∩ J ] 0.58824(0.70)
= 0.41176.

350. Solution: B

3000

P[Y ≥ 3000] = e 2000
= 0.223.

351. Solution: E

P(0 employees have accidents) = (0.6)2(0.9)2 = 0.2916

P(1 employee has accidents)


= P(1 high-risk employee has accidents and 0 low-risk employees have accidents
OR 0 high-risk employees have accidents and1 low-risk employee has accidents)

= P(1 high-risk employee has accidents)P(0 low-risk employees have accidents)


+ P(0 high-risk employees have accidents)P(1 low-risk employee has accidents)
[combining the addition rule for a union of mutually exclusive events and the multiplication rule
for independent events]

= (2)(0.4)(0.6)(0.9)2 + (0.6)2(2)(0.1)(0.9) = 0.4536

P(at most 1 employee has accidents) = 0.2916 + 0.4536 = 0.7452.

Page 97 of 125
352. Solution: D

Amt Paid Prob


0 0.70
5000 0.11
10000 0.08
15000 0.07
18000 0.04

E(X) = 3120
E(X2) =39,460,000
V(X) =39,460,000 – 3,1202 = 29,725,600
SD(X) = 5452

353. Solution: B

x x
∫ 8t dt =
−3
F ( x) = −4t −2 =
1 − 4 x −2 .
2 2
P ( 2.5 ≤ x ≤ 3 | x ≥ 2.5 )
F (3) − F (2.5) 1 − 4 / 9 − 1 + 4 / 6.25
= = = 0.3056.
1 − F (2.5) 1 − 1 + 4 / 6.25

354. Solution: B

M = Male
F = Female
A = Accident
P[ M ∩ A] =0.30
P[ M ∩ A]
P[ A | = =
M ] 0.50
P[ M ]
0.30
P[=
M] = 0.60
0.50
P[ F ] =
1 − P[ M ] =
1 − 0.60 =
0.40.

355. Solution: E

e−4 4 x
p( x) = , x = 0,1, 2,...;1 − [ p(0) + p(1) ] =
1 − 0.091578 =
0.908
x!

Page 98 of 125
356. Solution: C

This is a geometric distribution.


n −1
 3 1
P(success on nth trial)=    , n = 1,2,3,...
 4  4
1 3 9  37 27
Solution is 1 − [ p (1) + p (2) + p (3) ] =−
1  + +  =− 1 = =0.422.
 4 16 64  64 64

357. Solution: E

1
X follows a geometric distribution with p =
6
1
Y = 1 implies the first roll is a 6. Counting from the second roll E [ X=
] = 6. So
p
E [X Y = 1] = 1 + 6 = 7 .

358. Solution: C

e −2.5 2.5 x
P[X= x=
]
x!

P[0] = 0.082, P[1] = 0.205, P[2] = 0.257, P[3] = 0.214.


Probabilities for values greater than 3 are less than the probability of 3. The largest probability
occurs at the value of 2.

359. Solution: E

P[ M | X ] = 0.3 ⇒ P[ F | X ] = 0.7
P[ F | Y ] =0.4 ⇒ P[M | Y ] = 0.6
P[Y ] = 0.6 ⇒ P[ D] = 0.4
P[ M | Y ]P[Y ] (0.6)(0.6)
=P[Y | M ] = = 0.75
P[ M | Y ]P[Y ] + P[ M | X ]P[ X ] (0.6)(0.6) + (0.3)(0.4)

360. Solution: A

The probability of a 20% surcharge is 0.1, the probability of a 15% surcharge is 0.9(0.1), the
probability of a 10% surcharge is 0.9(0.9)(0.1) and the probability of a 5% surcharge is
0.9(0.1)(0.1)(0.1).
Expected surcharge = 0.20(0.1) + 0.15(0.1)(0.9) + 0.10(0.1)(0.9) 2 + 0.05(0.1)(0.9)3 =
0.045245

Page 99 of 125
361. Solution: C

Let Y be the expected payout. Then


E [Y ] = 0(0.75) + (1000 − 500 ) (0.12) + ( 5000 − 500 ) (0.08)
+ (10000 − 500 ) (0.04) + (15000 − 500 ) (0.01) =
945
The premium sis 945 + 75 =
1020 .

362. Solution: E

1
=µ 180
=   30
6
 1  5 
=σ =
180     5
 6  6 
39.5 − 30
P( X ≥ 40) → P( Z > ) = P( Z > 1.90) = 0.0287.
5

363. Solution: E

Let H be the event that the policyholder undergoes hospitalization this year.
Let A be the event that the policyholder is in class A.
P(A) = 12,000/30,000 = 0.4; P(B) = 18,000/30,000 = 0.6
P(H|A) = 1 - 0.98 = 0.02; P(H|B) = 1 - 0.995 = 0.005.
P(A|H) = P(A)P(H|A) / [P(A)P(H|A) + P(B)P(H|B)] by Bayes' Theorem
= (0.4)(0.02) / [(0.4)(0.02) + (0.6)(0.005)]
= 0.008 / 0.011 = 0.7272

364. Solution: D

Let X be the random variable that a part works. Then:


P( X > x) = e −0.2 x
P( X < x) =− 1 e −0.2 x
One year from now,
P[both parts will work | at least 1 part will work]
P [ both parts will work ]
=
P [ at least 1 part will work ]
e −0.2 e −0.2
1 − P(neither part works)
e −0.2 e −0.2
=
1 − (1 − e −0.2 )(1 − e −0.2 )
0.67032
= = 0.69310
0.96714

Page 100 of 125


365. Solution: E

P[no root canal | no fillings] = P[no root canals and no fillings] / P[no fillings]
= {1 – P[at least 1 root canal or filling]} / P[no fillings]
= (1 – 0.35)/0.7 = 13/14 = 0.92857.

366. Solution: D

This is a hypergeometric probability:


7 C3 3 C2 35(3)
= = 0.41667
10 C5 252

367. Solution: C

Heart
68

X
84 Diabete
Y s
68
Z
Cholesterol
68

68 + 84 + X + Z = 268
68 + 84 + X + Y = 268
68 + 84 + Y + Z = 268

X, Y and Z must all be equal, X = Y = Z = 58.

Total = 68 + 68 + 68 + 84 + 58 + 58 + 58 + 155 = 617

368. Solution: C

A: The event that a person is a smoker


B: The event that a person has below normal lung function.
P ( A ∪ B )= P ( A) + P ( B) − P( A ∩ B )
P ( A ∪ B )= P ( A) + P ( B) − P( B | A) P( A)
0.40 =0.25 + P( B) − (0.70)(0.25)
P ( B ) = 0.325

Page 101 of 125


369. Solution: E

P [ H ∩W ] =
P [ H ] P [W ] where H is the husband’s survival and W is the wife’s survival.

P[H ] = 0.90 , P [ H ∩ W ] =
0.70
1 − 0.10 = 0.70 . Therefore, P [=
W] = 77.8% and the probability
0.90
of the wife dying is 1 − P [W ] =
22.2% .

370. Solution: C

P[ B | S ]P[ S ]
P[ S | B ] =
P[ B | S ]P[ S ] + P[ B | R ]P[ R ] + P[ B | T ]P[T ] + P[ B | O]P[O]
0.08(0.25)
= 0.20408
0.08(0.25) + 0.12(0.60) + 0.06(0.10) + 0(0.05)

371. Solution: C

Using the quadratic equation and being careful with inequalities,

] P [ X < 0.127016654] + P [ X > 7.872983346]. For the standard normal


P 8 X − X 2 < 1=

X −5
variable Z = , this is:
2

P [ Z < −2.436491673] + P [ Z > 1.436491673]


= 0.0073 + 0.0749 = 0.0822.

372. Solution: A

Since the normal and uniform are symmetric the mean and median are the same and doubling
one doubles the other. For the exponential distribution the median is ln2 times the mean. Thus
doubling the mean doubles the median.

373. Solution: B

The marginal distribution of X is: P( X = 0) = 3 / 12 ; P( X = 1) = 4 / 12 ;


3 4 5
P( X = 2) = 5 / 12 . Thus E ( X 2 ) = 0 2 × + 12 × + 2 2 × = 2 and
12 12 12
3 4 5 14 196 23
E( X ) = 0 × + 1× + 2 × = so the variance is Var ( X ) =−
2 = = 0.639.
12 12 12 12 144 36

Page 102 of 125


374. Solution: B
To determine the mode, set f ′( x) = [5
72
]
6( x − 2) − 4( x − 2) 3 = 0 . This solves for

6( x − 2) − 4( x − 2) = 0 so either x − 2 = 0 and x = 2 or 6 − 4( x − 2) 2 = 0 . In this case,


3

6
( x − 2) 2 = giving x= 2 ± 1.2247 , so x = 0.7753 or x = 3.2247 which is outside the domain.
4
Check these two values and the endpoints:
f (0) = 0
f (3) = 0.4167
f (2) = 0.2778
f (0.7753) = 0.4340
The mode occurs at 0.775.

375. Solution: A
β 
t 4

F (t ) =4 β ∫ r dr =−
4
1   , for 0 < β ≤ t
−5

β t 
β 
4

P [T > 7 ] 1 − F ( 7 )  7  81
P [T > 4 + 3 | T >=
3] = = =
P [T > 3] 1 − F ( 3)  β  4
2401
 
3

376. Solution: C

The number of senior employees X included in the sample is distributed per the hypergeometric
distribution. The required probability is P[X = 3 or 4], which is:

 5  10   5  10 
   +   
 3   1 =  4   0  10(10) + 5(1)
= 0.07692.
15  1365
 
4

Page 103 of 125


377. Solution: C

1100 1900 60 28
=
P( H ) = , P ( L) = , P( S | H ) = , P ( S | L)
3000 3000 1100 1900
P ( S | L) P ( L)
P( L | S ) =
P ( S | L) P ( L) + P ( S | H ) P ( H )
28 1900
1900 3000 = = 28
= 0.31818
28 1900 60 1100 28 + 60
+
1900 3000 1100 3000

378. Solution: C

Let X = the company’s profit in a given year, which is normally distributed with mean µ = 6.72,
80 percentile of 8.4, and standard deviation σ. Then,
P( X < 8.4) = 0.80
8.4 − 6.72
P( Z < )=
0.80
σ
8.4 − 6.72
= 0.84162
σ
σ =2
P − 6.72
P( Z < )=0.90
2
P − 6.72
= 1.28155
2
P = 9.28

Page 104 of 125


379. Solution: B

Let X = the length of the power failure in days.


We need to find the value of m for which the cumulative probability = 0.5
m
(4 − x)3 (4 − x) 4 (4 − m) 4
m
0.5 =∫0 64 dx =−
256
1
(
= 256 − (4 − m) 4 =
256
1− )256
0

(4 − m) 4
= 0.5 ; (4 – m)4 = 128; 4 − m =4
128 ; m= 4 − 4 128
256

380. Solution: B

Let X, Y, and W denote the section length and the lengths of the two pieces trimmed from the
ends, respectively. Then the length of the finished product is L = X – Y – W + 2, which has the
normal distribution with mean 1205 – 2 – 2 + 2 = 1203 and variance 5.0 + 0.5 + 0.5 = 6.0. Then,
P[L ≥ 1200] = P[Z ≥ –3/ 6 ] = 0.8897.

381. Solution: C

This is an exponential distribution with P[ X < x] =1 − e− x /16 .


P[5 < X < 20]
P[ X < 20 | X > 5] =
P[ X > 5]
P[ X < 20] − P[ X < 5]
=
P[ X > 5]
20 5
− −
(1 − e ) − (1 − e )
16 16
= 5
0.60839

16
e

Page 105 of 125


382. Solution: A

X = 3 implies Y = 0 or 1
Let W be the number of pages with low graphical content. Then,
15   5  10 
   
 0 1 3 
 30  600
 
P=
(Y 0,= X 3) P= (Y 0,= W 1,= X 3)  4  = 27, 405= 0.25.
P (Y= 0 | X= 3)= = =
= P ( X 3)= P ( X 3)  20  10  2, 400
   27, 405
 1  3 
 30 
 
4
The denominator follows because the distribution of X is hypergeometric with categories of X
and not X. Then,

383. Solution: D

The density function is f ( x) = cx1/ n . Then


1
1 cx1/ n +1 c cn 1+ n
1 ∫ cx dx
= = 1/ n
= = ⇒=
c .
0 (1/ n) + 1 0 (1/ n) + 1 1 + n n
Let xp represent the pth percentile. Then,
x p (1 + n) x
1/ n xp
= ) ∫
p F ( x p= dx= x1+1/ n = ( x p )1+1/ n ⇒ x=
p p n /( n +1) .
0 n 0
The desired ratio is
x0.3 0.3n /( n +1)
( )
1/( n +1) n +1
= = n /( n +1)
=
1.5 n
1.5n .
x0.2 0.2

Page 106 of 125


384. Solution: B

1
c ∫ x 2 dx =1 ⇒ c =3
0
x
= ∫ t dt x
F ( x) 3= 2 3

The (100p) percentile of a claim under the first plan is the value of x satisfying x3 = p .
Since this value of x is also the (100p2) percentile of a claim under the second plan, the
cumulative distribution function F of a claim under the second plan is F ( x=
) p=2 (x =
)
2
3
x6 .
Then differentiating yields its probability density function = ′( x) 6 x 5 .
f ( x) F=

385. Solution: D

Let β be the mean of X. We know that


0.2  Pr  X  2  1 e2/ 
  8.96284
Let t be the time at which 80% of its computers have failed. Then,
0.8  Pr  X  t   1 et /8.96284
0.2  et /8.9628
t  14.42513

Page 107 of 125


386. Solution: D

Let N = number of tickets the driver receives, which has a Poisson distribution with mean 4.
N ( N + 1)
Note that the total fine is the sum of the integers from 1 to N, which equals .
2
So the expected total fine is
 N ( N + 1) 
E = 0.5 E ( N ) + 0.5 E ( N=
2
) 0.5[Var ( N ) + E ( N ) 2 + E ( N )]
 2 
= 0.5(4 + 16 + 4)= 12.

387. Solution: C
 2 d − 2
  
40  0   2  (d − 2)(d − 3)
=
The probability that the 2 most recent files are both intact is = .
51 d  d (d − 1)
 
2 
This leads to 40d 2 − 40d =51d 2 − 255d + 306 ⇒ 0 =11d 2 − 215d + 306 =(11d − 17)(d − 18) .
Since d is an integer that is at least 3, the unique solution is d = 18.
The probability that the 3 most recent files are all intact is
 3   d − 3
  
0 2 =  (d − 3)(d − 4)
=
15(14) 35
= = 0.686. .
d  d (d − 1) 18(17) 51
 
2 

388. Solution: D

Let N = number of claims; let X = the benefit paid.


P(N = 0) = 0.75; P(N = 1) = 0.25
E(X | N = 0) = 0; E(X | N = 1) = 8
Var(X | N = 0) = 0; Var(X | N = 1) = 82 = 64
Var(E(X | N)) = 82(0.25)(0.75) = 12 because i) a Bernoulli (0-1) random variable has variance
p(1 - p) if p = P(Bernoulli variable = 1), and ii)the variance of 8 times the Bernoulli is 82 times
the variance of the Bernoulli
E(Var(X | N)) = 0(0.75) + 64(0.25) = 16
Var(X) = Var(E(X | N)) + E(Var(X | N)) = 12 + 16 = 28.

Page 108 of 125


389. Solution: D

Let the hats (and men) be A, B, C, and D. There are 24 orderings of the hats drawn. Consider the
complement, where at least one man draws his hat.
If A is drawn first, all 6 subsequent combinations meet this event.
If B is drawn first, combinations ACD,CAD, and DCA meet this event.
If C or D is drawn first, each also have three combinations that meet this event.
Hence there are 6 + 3 + 3 + 3 = 15 ways to meet the complementary event.
The desired probability is (24-15)/24 = 0.375.

390. Solution: E

Using the probability density function for gamma distribution and integration by parts we have
∞ ∞ ∞
1 1 1 ∞ 1
∫ 32 Γ(2) x e = ∫ − 3 xe− x /3 + ∫ 3e− x /3dx
2 −1 − x /3
P( X > 4) = xe− x /3dx =
4
94 9 4 94
4 −4/3 1 − x /3 ∞ 4 −4/3 −4/3 7 −4/3
= e − 9e = e +e = e = 0.6151.
3 9 4 3 3

391. Solution: D

P[ A < 214] =
0.96
 214 − 30 
P Z <  =
0.96
 σ
214 − 30
= 1.75
σ
σ = 105.143
P[ B < 214] =
0.90
 214 − µ 
P Z < =
0.90
 105.143 
214 − µ
= 1.2816
105.143
µ = 79.25
The value for 0.96 was obtained using the closest entry in the normal table (1.75) while the value
for 0.90 (1.2816) was obtained from the list of percentiles at the bottom of the table.

Page 109 of 125


392. Solution: E

8 11
  ( x − 5) 2 8 (11 − x) 2 11

c  ∫ ( x − 5 ) dx + ∫ (11 − x)dx  = c  −  = c(4.5 + 4.5) = 1
5 8   2 5 2 8 
1
c=
9
8
( x − 5) 2 9 −1
8
1
∫ ( x − 5) dx = = = 0.444.
96 9(2) 6 18

393. Solution: C

Since both events are Poisson distributed, the combination is also Poisson distributed with
λ = 0.1 + 0.02 = 0.12 per year. The claims in forty years are also Poisson distributed with
=λ 40(0.12)
= 4.8 . To find the mode, First note that
e−4.8 4.8n 4.8 e−4.8 4.8n −1 4.8
=
p ( n) = = p (n − 1).
n! n (n − 1)! n

This means that the probability increases when n < 4.8 and decreases thereafter. We have p(4) =
1.2p(3) while p(5) = 0.96p(4) and hence the mode must be at 4. The total payments are 4000.

394. Solution: B

x−d
1 −
− 2 e β < 0, f ( x) is monotonically decreasing for x ≥ d. Thus, the mode of X is
Since f '( x) =
β
at its lowest possible value, that being x = d.

Let p be the 10th percentile of X.


p
∫ β e
−1 − ( x − d )/ β p
0.10 =
F ( p) = −e − ( x − d )/ β
dx = 1 − e − ( p − d )/ β
=
d d

0.90 = e − ( p − d )/ β
ln(0.9) = −( p − d ) / β
p= d − β ln(0.9) = d + β ln(10 / 9).
| p − d | β ln(10 / 9)=
So,= + d − d β ln(10 / 9).

Page 110 of 125


395. Solution: D



1 =c ∫ x −2 dx =−cx −1 =c100−1 ⇒ c =100
100
100
M
100 ∫ x −2 dx =
M
0.5 = −100 x −1 1 − 100 M −1 ⇒ M =
= 200
100
100

396. Solution: E

100 100
x1.25 k 1.25 k 1.25 x1.25
First, ∫ kx dx =k
0.25
= 100 =1 ⇒ k = 1.25 and F ( x) =
1.25
x =
0
1.25 0 1.25 100 1.25 1001.25
The desired percentile is
Pr(20 ≤ X ≤ p ) F ( p ) − F (20) p1.25 − 201.25
0.9= Pr( X ≤ p | X > 20)= = =
Pr( X > 20) 1 − F (20) 1001.25 − 201.25
=p [0.9(1001.25 − 201.25 )]1/1.25 + 20=
1.25
[0.9(316.23 − 42.29) + 42.29]1/1.25
= 93.01.

397. Solution: B

The three modes for A must be at 0, 2, and 5. Therefore, the frequencies for B at these values
must be 1, 4, and 1.
For values of 1, 3 and 4 the frequencies for A are at least 4. For B they are then at most 2 for
each of these values.
There is one frequency of 4 and all other frequencies are 2 or less. Hence there is one mode, at a
value of 2.

398. Solution: E

Let X = event of no fires the first 2 years; Y = event of no fires the following 2 years.
Let H = event of homeowner being high-risk; L = event of homeowner being low risk.
= =
P[ H ] 0.1; P[ L] 0.9
= =
P[ X | H ] 0.8 2
; P[ X | L] 0.992
=
P[ XandY | H ] 0.8= 4
; P[ XandY | L] 0.994
P[ XandY ] P[ XandY | H ]P[ H ] + P[ XandY | L]P[ L]
=
P[Y | X ] =
P[ X ] P[ X | H ]P[ H ] + P[ X | L]P[ L]
0.84 (0.1) + 0.994 (0.9)
= 0.95709.
0.82 (0.1) + 0.992 (0.9)

Page 111 of 125


399. Solution: A

A given person in this population has no cancer with probability 1 − 0.2 =


0.8 , cancer other than
stage IV with probability 0.2(1 − 0.08) =
0.184 , and stage IV cancer with probability
0.2(0.08) = 0.016 .

We need to find the probability that i) out of the first n − 1 patients, n − c have no cancer, c − 5
have cancer other than stage IV, and 4 have stage IV cancer, and ii) the nth patient has stage IV
cancer.

Keeping in mind that we are given that the patients are independent, we multiply the individual
probabilities together. We then multiply this product by the number of possible orders in which
(n − 1)!
these results need to occur, to get pN ,C (n, c) = (0.8) n −c (0.184)c −5 (0.016)5 .
(n − c)!(c − 5)!4!

400. Solution: E

Let W denote the total claims received.


P (W ≥ 2) =1 − P (W < 2) = 1 − [ P( X =
0, Y =
0) + P ( X =
0, Y =
1) + P ( X =
1, Y =
0)]
 8 7 6  33
=−
1  + + = = 0.61
 54 54 54  54

401. Solution: C

 1000 − µ 
PZ < =0.3446
 500 
1000 − µ
= −0.40
500
µ = 1200
 P − 1200 
P  Z < 0.9 =0.90
 500 
P0.9 − 1200
= 1.2816
500
P0.9 = 1840.8

Median equals the mean or 1200, the difference is 1840.8 − 1200 =


640.8.

Page 112 of 125


402. Solution: A

Var ( X )= λ= E ( X 2 ) − E ( X ) 2
=λ 0.2756 − λ 2
λ 2 + λ − 0.2756 = 0
By quadratic formula: λ = 0.2250
Then: 15λ = 3.37474
Then,
P (Y > 2) =1 − P (Y ≤ 2)
1 − [ P (0) + P (1) + P (2) ]
=
 3.374740 3.374741 3.374742 
= 1 − e −3.37474  + +
 0! 1! 2! 
= 0.65536.

403. Solution: C

Hypergeometric:
 5  4  6 
   
1  3 1  = 0.040
15 
 
5 

404. Solution: B

The marginal distribution of Y is:


24 17 10 51
pY (0) = p (0, 0) + p (1, 0) + p (2, 0) = + + =
126 126 126 126
21 14 7 42
pY (1) = p (0,1) + p (1,1) + p (2,1) = + + =
126 126 126 126
18 11 4 33
pY (2) = p (0, 2) + p (1, 2) + p (2, 2) = + + =
126 126 126 126
51 42 33 108
E (Y ) = 0 +1 +2 =
126 126 126 126
51 2 42 33 174
E (Y 2 ) = 02 +1 + 22 =
126 126 126 126
2
174  108 
V (Y ) = −   =
0.64626.
126  126 

Page 113 of 125


405. Solution: A

The expected monthly payout is:


100,000 * [300,000 * P(match all 5 and bonus number) + 50,000 * P(match all 5 but no bonus
number) + 0 * P(match fewer than 5 numbers)].
1 1 1
P(Match all five and =
Bonus) = *
 30  5 712,530
 
5
1 4 4
P(Match all five and No=
Bonus) = *
 30  5 712,530
 
5
Thus, expected monthly payout equals:
 1 4 
100, 000 300, 000 + 50, 000 =
70,172.
 712,530 712,530 

406. Solution: E

Y is a binomial random variable with n = 5 and probability of success equal to s + t.


Next, the probability that Y = 5 is:
5
P(Y = 5) =   ( s + t )5 = c ⇒ s + t = c1/5 ⇒ s = c1/5 − t
5
Then,
s + 0.75s +=t 1.75s += t 1
t=
1 − 1.75(c1/5 − t )
t=
1 − 1.75c1/5 + 1.75t
=
0.75t 1.75c1/5 − 1
1.75c1/5 − 1 7c1/5 − 4
=t = .
0.75 3

407. Solution: E

Let X denote the time until failure. Because the median of X is 3, we have:
P( X > 3) = 0.5 = e −3/ β
3
ln 0.5 = −
β
β = 4.32809
The variance of an exponential random variable is β 2 = 18.73232 .
Because the exponential distribution is memoryless, the variance of the future lifetime from t =
0.5 is also β 2 = 18.73232.

Page 114 of 125


408. Solution: E
Let H be the event a single head and F be the event the fair coin is selected. Then,
P( HHH )
P( HHH | HH ) =
P( HH )
P( HH=) P( HH | F ) P ( F ) + P ( HH | F ′) P ( F=
′) [(1/ 2)(1/ 2)](1/ 2) + [(1)(1)](1/ =
2) 5 / 8
P( HHH= ) P( HHH | F ) P( F ) + P( HHH | F ′) P( F = ′) [(1/ 2)(1/ 2)(1/ 2)](1/ 2) + [(1)(1)(1)](1/ 2)
= 9 /16
9 /16 9
=
P( HHH | HH ) = .
5 / 8 10

409. Solution: A

Let X represent the loss. Since it is given that losses never exceed 10, we have
4 4
 10  3  15  3
=
1 P[ X ≤ 10]= F (10)= c   ⇒ = c   .
 15   10 
Since the probability that a given loss is partially reimbursed is 0.56, we have
4 4 4 4
 m 3  15  3  m  3  m 3
0.56 =P[ X > m] =−
1 P[ X ≤ m] =−
1 F (m) =−
1 c   =− 1     =− 1   .
 15   10   15   10 
3
10 (1 − 0.56 ) 4 =
Solving for m yields m = 5.40 .

410. Solution: E

We need to find FX ,Y (2,3) = P[ X ≤ 2 and Y ≤ 3] , which equals the probability of at most 2


tornadoes and a total loss of at most 3.
The probability of no tornadoes or exactly one tornado is 0.8 + 0.12 = 0.92, and in this situation,
the total loss is no more than 2 and is therefore no more than 3.
The probability of exactly two tornadoes is 0.05, and in this situation, the total loss is at most 3
as long as both losses are not 2, which occurs with probability 1 − (0.5) 2 = 0.75 .
Therefore, FX ,Y (2,3) =0.92 + 0.05(0.75) = 0.9575 .

411. Solution: A

Let the marginal pdf for be pY(y), for y = 0,1,2.


pY (0) = p (0, 0) + p (1, 0) + p (2, 0) + p (3, 0) =
(12 + 9 + 6 + 3) / 60 =
30 / 60
pY (1) =
p (0,1) + p (1,1) + p (2,1) + p (3,1) =
(8 + 6 + 4 + 2) / 60 =
20 / 60
pY (2) =
1 − (30 + 20) / 60 =
10 / 60
E (Y ) = 0(3 / 6) + 1(2 / 6) + 2(1/ 6) = 4 / 6
Var (Y ) =
02 (3 / 6) + 12 (2 / 6) + 22 (1/ 6) − (4 / 6) 2 =−16)
(36 = =
/ 36 20 / 36 0.56

Page 115 of 125


412. Solution: D

This is the same as the probability that all three claims are less than 7, which is (0.7)3 = 0.343.

413. Solution: B

This is a negative binomial distribution. The probability of finding fraud is 0.9(0.2) = 0.18. Let
p(x) be the probability of examining x policies. Then,
p (1) = 0
= =
p (2) 0.18 2
0.0324
= =
p (3) 2(0.82)(0.18) 2
0.0531
= =
p (4) 3(0.82) 2
(0.18) 2 0.0654
p (5) = 1 − 0.0324 − 0.0531 − 0.0654 =0.8491
E ( X ) = 2(0.0324) + 3(0.0531) + 4(0.0654) + 5(0.8491) = 4.7312.

414. Solution: E

This is a hypergeometric problem.


 6   3  6 3
     
P[ X = 3] = 3   1  + P[ X =
4] = 40
9 9
   
 4  4
= 0.4762 + 0.1190 = 0.5952.

415. Solution: B

Let C be the expected number buying the carriage only


S be the expected number buying the seat only
B be the expected number buying both

Then C + S + B + 0.60(200) = 200


C + B = 0.20(200) = 40
S + B = 0.35(200) = 70
40 + 70 – B + 120 = 200
B = 30, C = 10, S = 40
Revenue = 10(300) + 40(100) + 30(360) = 17,800

Page 116 of 125


416. Solution: C

Let X i be the number of claims for policyholder i. We= have 1 Var = ( X i ) E ( X i ). The total
amount paid is then= S 100( X 1 +  + X 1000 ) . Note that the solution employs the continuity
correction.
=
E ( S ) 100[ E ( X 1 ) +  + E ( X
= = 100, 000
1000 )] 100(1, 000)(1)

=
Var ( S ) 1002 [Var ( X 1 ) +  + Var
= ( X 1000 )] 1002 =
(1, 000)(1) 10, 000, 000
= =
StDev( S ) 10, 000, 0001/2 3,162.28
= =
Premium 1.03(100, 000) 103, 000
 103, 050 − 100, 000 
P( S > 103, 000) =
PZ > = 0.9645= 0.167
 3,162.28 

417. Solution: B

This is a negative binomial distribution.

 3
P(Second fatal crash occurs on the fourth save) =   (0.02) 2 (0.98) 2 = 0.001152.
1 

418. Solution: C

Let M = # of accidents in first year, N = # of accidents in second year.


P (=
M 1,= N 1) 0.08(0.08)
P ( M = 1, N = 1| M + N = 2) = =
= P ( M + N 2) 0.9(0.02) + 0.08(0.08) + 0.02(0.9)
0.0064
= = 0.151
0.0424

419. Solution: B

X = amount of time (years) before repair is needed, which is uniform on [0, 5]

P[ X > 4.5 | X > 2]


P[ X > 4.5]
=
P[ X > 2]
5 − 4.5
= 5 − 0 = = 0.167
1
5−2 6
5−0

Page 117 of 125


420. Solution: C

Using integration by parts


2 2

∫ xe dx =− xe − ∫ −e dx =−
−x −x 2−x 2
( 2e −2 + e −1 ) − e − x =−3e −2 + 2e −1 =0.329753.
1 1
1 1

421. Solution: C

Let X = lifetime of a television of this brand:

0.5 = 1 − e −2/7/ β
P[ X < 2.7] =
2.7 / β = 0.6931
β = 3.8953
0.875 =P[ X < P ] =−1 e − p /3.8953
p / 3.8953 = 2.0794
p = 8.10.

422. Solution: A

Since one of C or D is guaranteed to occur, and they are mutually exclusive:


P[A] = P[A ∩ C ] + P[A ∩ D ] so,
P[A ∩ D ] = 0.75 − 0.50 = 0.20 .
Then, since one of A and B is guaranteed to occur:
P[D ] = P[ A ∩ D ] + P[B ∩ D ] ,
so P[B ∩ D ] = 0.20 − 0.20 = 0.00

Page 118 of 125


423. Solution: C

We are given the following:

Overstated Didn't overstate Row Total


Claimed at least 1000 0.45 0.70
Claimed less than 1000
Column Total 0.50

This gives

Overstated Didn't overstate Row Total


Claimed at least 1000 0.45 0.25 0.70
Claimed less than 1000 0.05 0.25 0.30
Column Total 0.50 0.50 1.00

Then, P(Overstated | Less than 1000) = P(Overstated and Less than 1000)/P(Less than 1000) =
0.05/0.30 = 1/6.

424. Solution: E

There are (26C3)(3) = 7,800 ways to select the 3 distinct upper case letters and choose one for the
leading position of the password. For each of those ways, there are 4P2 = 12 ways to allocate the
other two letters among the 4 open positions. So there are 93,600 ways to allocate the letters.
For each, there are 102 ways to select and place the two digits in the remaining two open
positions. Thus, there are 9,360,000 possibilities.

425. Solution: B

Let X = number of fillings, which has a Poisson distribution with mean λ


e−λ λ 0
0.18= P[ X= 0]= = e−λ
0!
λ = 1.7147
Since the mean is 1.7147, the mode will be 1 as it can be shown that when the mean is not a
whole number, the mode is the largest whole number less than the mean. When the mean is a
whole number, there are two modes, the mean and one less than the mean.

Page 119 of 125


426. Solution: B

50
1
=
1 ∫ ktdt
0
= 1250k ⇒=
k
1250
25
t
P[20 < T < 25] ∫ 1250dt (625 − 400) / 2500 225
P[T ≤ 25 | T ≥ 20]= = 20
= = = 0.10714
P[T > 20] 50
t (2500 − 400) / 2500 2100
∫ 1250dt
20

427. Solution: B

= =
P[ L] 0.45, P[ M ] 0.35,= P[ H ] 0.20
0.009 = P[ D] = P[ D | H ]P[ H ] + P[ D | M ]P[ M ] + P[ D | L]P[ L]
= P[ D | H ]P[ H ] + (1/ 2) P[ D | H ]P[ M ] + (1/ 6) P[ D | H ]P[ L]
= P[ D | H ]{0.20 + (1/ 2)(0.35) + (1/ 6)(0.45)}
= P[ D | H ]{0.45}
= =
P[ D | H ] 0.009 / 0.45 0.20

428. Solution: B

Let = working lifetime of chips, in years. Then


0.05 =P[ X ≤ t ] =1 − e−t /7.2
e −t /7.2 = 0.95
−t / 7.2 = −0.05129
t = 0.3693

429. Solution: E

2 2
1= ∫0 f ( x)dx = ∫0 cxdx = 2c ⇒ c = 0.5
p
=
0.8 ∫0 0.5 xdx= 0.25 p 2 ⇒ =
p 3.2= 1.7889

Page 120 of 125


430. Solution: E

Let X and Y represent the exponentially distributed life spans of televisions A and B,
respectively, and let λ1 and λ2 represent the means for X and Y, respectively.
Var( X ) = λ12 = 5.6 ⇒ λ1 = 2.3664
( )
0.49 = P( X > T ) = 1 − 1 − e −T / λ1 = e −T /2.3664 ⇒ −T / 2.3664 = −0.7133 ⇒ T = 1.6881
−T / λ2 −1.6881/ λ2
0.7 = P (Y > T ) = e =e ⇒ −1.6882 / λ2 = −0.3567 ⇒ λ2 = 4.7332 .
) λ= 4.7332= 22.403 .
Var (Y= 2
2
2

431. Solution: D

Let X i be the profit earned in quarter i. Then


 0−µ
0.8= P[ X i > 0]= P  Z > ⇒ µ / σ= 0.84
 σ 
Let S = X 1+ X 2 + X 3 + X 4 be the total profit for the year. Then S has a normal distribution with
mean 4 µ and variance 4σ 2 . Then,
 0 − 4µ 
P[ S > 0] =P Z > =−2 µ / σ =−1.68 =
0.9535.
 2σ 

432. Solution: B

 400 − 500  400 − 500


0.1056 = P[ N past < 400] = P Z <  ⇒ = −1.25 ⇒ σ = 80
 σ  σ
 370 − 550 730 − 550 
P 370 < N future < 730  = P  <Z< = P [ −1.8 < Z < 1.8] = 0.9641 − 0.0359 = 0.9282
 100 100 

433. Solution: A

Let X be the profit from flood insurance and Y be the profit from fire insurance and let S = X + Y be the
total profit. Let µ and σ be the mean and standard deviation of X.
 0−µ 0−µ
P[ X > 0] = P Z >  = 0.67 ⇒ = −0.44 ⇒ 0.44σ = µ
 σ  σ
S has a normal distribution with mean E[ X ] + E[Y ] =µ + 3µ =4 µ and standard deviation
Var ( X ) + Var (Y ) = σ 2 + 9σ 2 = 10σ .
 0 − 4 µ −4(0.44σ ) 
P[ S > 0] =P Z > = =−0.56  =
0.71
 10σ 10σ 

Page 121 of 125


434. Solution: D

Let X j = number of accidents occurring on the jth roller coaster, for j = 1, 2, which is Poisson
distributed with mean λ j .
The probability that at least one accident occurs on roller coaster j equals
e j (λ j )
−λ 0
−λ
1 − P  X j =0  =
1− = 1− e j .
0!
Since the probability that at least one accident occurs on the second roller coaster is twice that
for the first roller coaster, 1 − e − λ2 =2 (1 − e − λ1 ) . Then
e − λ2 =2e − λ1 − 1 ⇒ λ2 = ( )
− ln 2e − λ1 − 1 = ( )
− ln 2e −0.5 − 1 =
1.546 .

435. Solution: B

Standard deviation equals 85 implies mean = 85.


Let M equal the median
P[ X > M ] = 0.5
e − M /85 = 0.5
−M
= ln 0.5
85
M = 58.92
So median minus mean = 58.92 - 85 = –26.08

436. Solution: D

The mean equals the standard deviation, so is also 1000. By the memoryless property of the
exponential distribution,


∫ 0.001e dx =
−0.001 x
P[ X > 1500 | X > 1000] =
P[ X > 500] = −e −0.001x e −0.5 0.6065.
==
500
500

437. Solution: D

P[exactly 2 injuries]
= P[1 or 2 injuries] + P[2 or 3 injuries] – P[at least 1 injury] + P[4 or more injuries]
= 0.25 + 0.036 – 0.26 + 0.002
= 0.028

Page 122 of 125


438. Solution: E

The event that the first 5 items fill the truck to its capacity is equivalent to the event that the first
5 items include 3 items of Type A and 2 items of Type B. This is a hypergeometric probability:
 6  4 
  
 3 
=
2  20(6) 10
=
10  252 21
 
5

439. Solution: D

Let X and Y be the profits in years 1 and 2 respectively. Let S = X + Y be the total profit for the
two years.
 0−µ
0.8531 = P[ X > 0] = P  Z > ⇒ − µ / σ X = −1.05 ⇒ σ X = µ /1.05
 σ X 
 0−µ
0.9192 = P[Y > 0] = P  Z > ⇒ − µ / σ Y = −1.40 ⇒ σ X = µ /1.40
 σ Y 
E[ S ] = µ + µ = 2 µ , Var ( S ) = σ X2 + σ Y2 = µ 2 (1/1.052 + 1/1.402 ), σ S = 1.1905µ
 0 − 2µ 
P[ S > 0] =P Z > =−1.68 =
0.9535
 1.1905µ 

440. Solution: E
The distribution function for an exponential distribution is F ( x) = 1 − e− x / λ .
1 − e −400/ λ =
0.5
e −400/ λ = 0.5
−400 / λ = ln 0.5
λ = 577.08.

441. Solution: C

The variance of a uniform distribution is 1/12 of the square of the interval length. The standard
b
deviation of the hospitalization charge is = 9.6 ⇒ b = 33.255 . The standard deviation of the
12
2b − 6 2(33.255) − 6
=
surgery charge is = 17.4677.
12 12

Page 123 of 125


442. Solution: B
b − 11
P[ X > 11] = 0.2 =
b−a
b − a = 5(b − 11)
b −8
P[ X > 8] = 0.6 =
b−a
0.6[5(b − 11)] =−
b 8
3b − 33 =b − 8
b = 12.5
a=5
(12.5 − 5) 2
=
Var ( X ) = 4.6875.
12

443. Solution: E

5 2 3 5
E[| X − 2 |] = ∫1 | x − 2 | f ( x)dx = ∫1 (2 − x) f ( x)dx ∫ ( x − 2) f ( x)dx ∫ ( x − 2) f ( x)dx
2 3
2 x −1 3 x −1 5 5− x
∫ (2 − x)
=
1 4
dx ∫ ( x − 2)
2 4
dx ∫ ( x − 2)
3 4
dx

444. Solution: C
Y 
The question requires calculation of E   . The joint density of X and Y is given by
X
X
1 2 3
Y 0 6/18 4/18 2/18
1 3/18 2/18 1/18

The six cells yield the quotients Y = 0, 0, 0, 1, 1/2, 1/3. The expected value of Y is thus
X X
 3  1   2  1   1  1 
   +    +    , which is
13
.
 18  1   18  2   18  3  54

Page 124 of 125


445. Solution: C

There are 3(420) = 1260 drivers who have exactly one risk factor. There are 320 with all three
factors. Look at the 1200 drivers with the first risk factor. 420 + 320 = 740 are accounted for.
The remining 460 drivers have exactly one other risk factor. This is 230 for each and hence
3(230) = 690 with exactly two risk factors. Also adding the 480 with no risk factors gives a total
of 1260 + 320 + 690 + 480 = 2750.

446. Solution: A

We have that 11.0 = 0y + 5(2x + 2x) + 30(3x), so x =0.10. Thus y = 0.30. The variance we seek
is therefore (0–11)2(0.3) + (5–11)2(0.4) + (30–11)2(0.3) = 159.0.

Page 125 of 125

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