Statistics Tutorial: Working With Probability: How To Interpret Probability
Statistics Tutorial: Working With Probability: How To Interpret Probability
The probability of an event refers to the likelihood that the event will occur.
How to Interpret Probability
Mathematically, the probability that an event will occur is expressed as a number between 0 and
1. Notationally, the probability of event A is represented by P(A).
• If P(A) equals zero, event A will almost definitely not occur.
• If P(A) is close to zero, there is only a small chance that event A will occur.
• If P(A) equals 0.5, there is a 50-50 chance that event A will occur.
• If P(A) is close to one, there is a strong chance that event A will occur.
• If P(A) equals one, event A will almost definitely occur.
The sum of all possible outcomes in a statistical experiment is equal to one. This means, for
example, that if an experiment can have three possible outcomes (A, B, and C), then P(A) + P(B)
+ P(C) = 1.
How to Compute Probability: Equally Likely Outcomes
Sometimes, a statistical experiment can have n possible outcomes, each of which is equally
likely. Suppose a subset of r outcomes are classified as "successful" outcomes.
The probability that the experiment results in a successful outcome (S) is:
P(S) = ( Number of successful outcomes ) / ( Total number of equally likely outcomes ) = r / n
Consider the following experiment. An urn has 10 marbles. Two marbles are red, three are green,
and five are blue. If an experimenter randomly selects 1 marble from the urn, what is the
probability that it will be green?
In this experiment, there are 10 equally likely outcomes, three of which are green marbles.
Therefore, the probability of choosing a green marble is 3/10 or 0.30.
How to Compute Probability: Law of Large Numbers
One can also think about the probability of an event in terms of its long-run relative frequency.
The relative frequency of an event is the number of times an event occurs, divided by the total
number of trials.
P(A) = ( Frequency of Event A ) / ( Number of Trials )
For example, a merchant notices one day that 5 out of 50 visitors to her store make a purchase.
The next day, 20 out of 50 visitors make a purchase. The two relative frequencies (5/50 or 0.10
and 20/50 or 0.40) differ. However, summing results over many visitors, she might find that the
probability that a visitor makes a purchase gets closer and closer 0.20.
The scatterplot (above right) shows the relative frequency as the number of trials (in this case,
the number of visitors) increases. Over many trials, the relative frequency converges toward a
stable value (0.20), which can be interpreted as the probability that a visitor to the store will
make a purchase.
The idea that the relative frequency of an event will converge on the probability of the event, as
the number of trials increases, is called the law of large numbers.
Test Your Understanding of This Lesson
Problem
A coin is tossed three times. What is the probability that it lands on heads exactly one time?
(A) 0.125
(B) 0.250
(C) 0.333
(D) 0.375
(E) 0.500
Solution
The correct answer is (D). If you toss a coin three times, there are a total of eight possible
outcomes. They are: HHH, HHT, HTH, THH, HTT, THT, TTH, and TTT. Of the eight possible
outcomes, three have exactly one head. They are: HTT, THT, and TTH. Therefore, the
probability that three flips of a coin will produce exactly one head is 3/8 or 0.375.
• The probability that Event A occurs, given that Event B has occurred, is called a
conditional probability. The conditional probability of Event A, given Event B, is
denoted by the symbol P(A|B).
• The complement of an event is the event not occuring. The probability that Event A will
not occur is denoted by P(A').
• The probability that Events A and B both occur is the probability of the intersection of A
and B. The probability of the intersection of Events A and B is denoted by P(A ∩ B). If
Events A and B are mutually exclusive, P(A ∩ B) = 0.
• The probability that Events A or B occur is the probability of the union of A and B. The
probability of the union of Events A and B is denoted by P(A ∪ B) .
• If the occurence of Event A changes the probability of Event B, then Events A and B are
dependent. On the other hand, if the occurence of Event A does not change the
probability of Event B, then Events A and B are independent.
Probability Calculator
Use the Probability Calculator to compute the probability of an event from the known
probabilities of other events. The Probability Calculator is free and easy to use. It can be found
under the Stat Tools tab, which appears in the header of every Stat Trek web page.
Probability Calculator
Rule of Subtraction
In a previous lesson, we learned two important properties of probability:
• The probability of an event ranges from 0 to 1.
• The sum of probabilities of all possible events equals 1.
The rule of subtraction follows directly from these properties.
Rule of Subtraction The probability that event A will occur is equal to 1 minus the probability
that event A will not occur.
P(A) = 1 - P(A')
Suppose, for example, the probability that Bill will graduate from college is 0.80. What is the
probability that Bill will not graduate from college? Based on the rule of subtraction, the
probability that Bill will not graduate is 1.00 - 0.80 or 0.20.
Rule of Multiplication
The rule of multiplication applies to the situation when we want to know the probability of the
intersection of two events; that is, we want to know the probability that two events (Event A and
Event B) both occur.
Rule of Multiplication The probability that Events A and B both occur is equal to the
probability that Event A occurs times the probability that Event B occurs, given that A has
occurred.
P(A ∩ B) = P(A) P(B|A)
Example
An urn contains 6 red marbles and 4 black marbles. Two marbles are drawn without replacement
from the urn. What is the probability that both of the marbles are black?
Solution: Let A = the event that the first marble is black; and let B = the event that the second
marble is black. We know the following:
• In the beginning, there are 10 marbles in the urn, 4 of which are black. Therefore, P(A) =
4/10.
• After the first selection, there are 9 marbles in the urn, 3 of which are black. Therefore,
P(B|A) = 3/9.
Therefore, based on the rule of multiplication:
P(A ∩ B) = P(A) P(B|A)
P(A ∩ B) = (4/10)*(3/9) = 12/90 = 2/15
Rule of Addition
The rule of addition applies to the following situation. We have two events, and we want to
know the probability that either event occurs.
Rule of Addition The probability that Event A or Event B occurs is equal to the probability that
Event A occurs plus the probability that Event B occurs minus the probability that both Events A
and B occur.
P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A ∩ B))
Note: Invoking the fact that P(A ∩ B) = P( A )P( B | A ), the Addition Rule can also be
expressed as
P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A)P( B | A )
Example
A student goes to the library. The probability that she checks out (a) a work of fiction is 0.40, (b)
a work of non-fiction is 0.30, , and (c) both fiction and non-fiction is 0.20. What is the
probability that the student checks out a work of fiction, non-fiction, or both?
Solution: Let F = the event that the student checks out fiction; and let N = the event that the
student checks out non-fiction. Then, based on the rule of addition:
P(F ∪ N) = P(F) + P(N) - P(F ∩ N)
P(F ∪ N) = 0.40 + 0.30 - 0.20 = 0.50
Test Your Understanding of This Lesson
Problem 1
An urn contains 6 red marbles and 4 black marbles. Two marbles are drawn with replacement
from the urn. What is the probability that both of the marbles are black?
(A) 0.16
(B) 0.32
(C) 0.36
(D) 0.40
(E) 0.60
Solution
The correct answer is A. Let A = the event that the first marble is black; and let B = the event
that the second marble is black. We know the following:
• In the beginning, there are 10 marbles in the urn, 4 of which are black. Therefore, P(A) =
4/10.
• After the first selection, we replace the selected marble; so there are still 10 marbles in
the urn, 4 of which are black. Therefore, P(B|A) = 4/10.
Therefore, based on the rule of multiplication:
P(A ∩ B) = P(A) P(B|A)
P(A ∩ B) = (4/10)*(4/10) = 16/100 = 0.16
Problem 2
A card is drawn randomly from a deck of ordinary playing cards. You win $10 if the card is a
spade or an ace. What is the probability that you will win the game?
(A) 1/13
(B) 13/52
(C) 4/13
(D) 17/52
(E) None of the above.
Solution
The correct answer is C. Let S = the event that the card is a spade; and let A = the event that the
card is an ace. We know the following:
• There are 52 cards in the deck.
• There are 13 spades, so P(S) = 13/52.
• There are 4 aces, so P(A) = 4/52.
• There is 1 ace that is also a spade, so P(S ∩ A) = 1/52.
Therefore, based on the rule of addition:
P(S ∪ A) = P(S) + P(A) - P(S ∩ A)
P(S ∪ A) = 13/52 + 4/52 - 1/52 = 16/52 = 4/13
5
= ---- = .1
50
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+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
0 .1 .2 .3 .4 .5 .6 .7 .8 .9 1
What if we wanted to get a more accurate estimate at our probability? We need to make more
comparison between bets. For example, we could compare two bets, where the first bet used our
event and the second used the event "draw red" from a bowl of chips with 6 red and 4 white.
After a number of these comparisons, we can get a pretty accurate estimate at our probability.