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MAST20006 Probability for Statistics /MAST90057 Elements of Probability

Assignment 1, Semester 1 2018


Due date: 4pm, Friday March 16.
• Your assignment should show all working and reasoning. Marks will be given for
method as well as for correct answers.

• Assignments count for 20% of your assessment. Tutors will not help you directly with
assignment questions. However, they may give some appropriate guidance.

• This assignment must be placed in your tutor’s MAST20006 (or MAST90057) box
which can be found in the east-west corridor leading to Wilson Lab (Room G70,
Richard Berry Building).

• Late assignments will only be accepted under exceptional circumstances and must be
handed personally to the tutor coordinator Ben Hines (hinesb@unimelb.edu.au), with
a written explanation for submitting late and/or a medical certificate. A late penalty
may be imposed.

• Label your assignment with the following information: Your name and student number,
your tutor’s name, your tutorial group (day and time).

• DO NOT FORGET TO COMPLETE THE PLAGIARISM DECLARATION ON THE


SUBJECT’S LMS BEFORE SUBMIT YOUR FIRST ASSIGNMENT.
This declaration needs to be done only once and will cover all assignments for this
semester in MAST20006 and MAST90057.
MAST20006/90057 Semester 1, 2018 Assignment 1 1

Only two questions (the same 2 for all students, and decided by random selection) will
be marked by your tutor. The other questions are mandatory with solutions to be given later.
Two marks will be automatically deducted if you do not provide evidence on your submitted
work that you have attempted all the questions. The total marks for this assignment is 20.

1. A track star runs two races on a certain day. The probability that he wins the first
race is 0.7; the probability that he wins the second race is 0.6. Also whether or not
he wins one race is independent of whether or not he wins the other race. Find the
probability that

(a) he wins at least one race.


(b) he wins exactly one race.
(c) he wins neither race.

2. Binary digits 0 and 1 are transmitted over a communication channel. If a 1 is sent, it


will be received as a 1 with probability 0.95 and as a 0 with probability 0.05; if a 0 is
sent, it will be received as a 0 with probability 0.99 and as a 1 with probability 0.01.
If the probability that a 0 is sent is the same as the probability that a 1 is sent, what
is

(a) the conditional probability that a 1 was sent given that a 1 was received?
(b) the conditional probability that a 0 was sent given that a 0 was received?
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3. Let P (A) = P (B) = 3
and P (A ∩ B) = 25 . Find the following:

(a) P (A0 ).
(b) P (A0 ∩ B 0 ).
(c) P (B ∩ A0 ).
(d) P (A ∪ B 0 ).

4. Birthday paradox.

(a) Consider a group of 3 students. Each student has a birthday that can be any one
of the days numbered 1, 2, 3, ..., 365. What is the probability that none of them
have the same birthday with each other?
(b) Consider a group of 23 students. Each student has a birthday that can be any
one of the days numbered 1, 2, 3, ..., 365.
i. What is the probability that none of them have the same birthday with each
other?
ii. What is the probability that some of them have the same birthday with each
other? Is this probability greater than 0.5?

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MAST20006/90057 Semester 1, 2018 Assignment 1 2

5. It is known from experience that in a certain industry 60 percent of all labor-management


disputes are over wages, 15 percent are over working conditions, and 25 percent are
over fringe issues. Also, 45 percent of the disputes over wages are resolved without
strikes, 70 percent of the disputes over working conditions are resolved without strikes,
and 40 percent of the disputes over fringe issues are resolved without strikes. What
is the probability that a labor-management dispute in this industry will be resolved
without a strike? (Hint: Apply the law of total probability.)

6. In a certain community, 8 percent of all adults over 50 years old have diabetes. If
a health service in this community correctly diagnoses 95 percent of all persons with
diabetes as having the disease and incorrectly diagnoses 2 percent of all persons without
diabetes as having the disease, find the probabilities that

(a) the community health service will diagnose an adult over 50 as having diabetes;
(b) a person over 50 diagnosed by the health service as having diabetes actually has
the disease.

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