Statistics and Probability Assignment
Statistics and Probability Assignment
Statistics and Probability Assignment
Year Sex
Male Female
1 50 20
2 45 15
3 40 10
19. The following table shows the distribution of a group of families according to their
expenditure per week. The median and the mode of the distribution are known to be 25.50
birr and 24.50 birr respectively. Two frequency values are however missing from the table.
20. Two sections were given an examination on a certain course. For section 1, the average mark
(score) was 72 with standard deviation of 6 and for section 2, the average mark (score) was 85
with standard deviation of 7. If student A from section 1 scored 84 and student B from section
2 scored 90, then who perform better relative to the group?
21. If a multiple choice test consists of 4 questions each with 4 possible answers of which one is
correct,
a) In how many different ways can a student provides answers to all questions?
b) In how many different ways can a student provides answers for each question and gets all
the questions wrong?
22. Four men and three women are to be seated at a lunch counter that has only five stools.
a) In how many ways can these people be arranged at the counter?
b) In how many ways can they be arranged at the counter if all the women are to be seated?
c) In how many ways can they be arranged at the counter if all the women are to be seated
and if men occupy the first and last stool?
d) If customers take seats at random, what is the probability that all of the men are seated and
that a woman occupies the middle stool?
23. An engineer must select three tests to perform in a certain order on a manufactured part. He
has a choice of seven tests. How many ways can he perform three different tests?
24. In how many ways can a committee of 4 be formed from 10 men and 12 women if it is to
have
a) 2 men and 2 women? c) 4 men?
b) 1 man and 3 women? d) 4 people regardless of sex?
25. Four married couples have bought 8 seats in a row for a show. In how many different ways
can they be seated
a. If each couple is to sit together.
b. If all the women sit together.
c. If all the women sit together to the right of all the men?
26. The letters of the word CONSTANTINOPLE are written on 14 cards. The cards are shuffled
and then arranged in a straight line.
a) How many different possible arrangements are there?
b) How many arrangements begin with P?
c) How many arrangements start and end with O?
d) How many arrangements are there where no two vowels are next to each other?
28. Consider four objects, say a, b, c and d. suppose that the order in which these objects are
listed represents the outcome of an experiment. Let the events A and B be defined as follows:
A = {a is in the first position}; B = {b is in the second position}.
a. List all elements of the sample space.
b. List all elements of the events AnB and AUB.
29. A lot consists of 10 good articles, 4 with minor defects and 2 with major defects.
i. One article is chosen at random. Find the probability that
a. It has no defects, c) It is either good or has major defects.
b. It has no major defects,
ii. Two articles are chosen (without replacement), Find the probability that
a. Both are good c. At most one is good
b. Both have major defects d. Exactly one is good
30. Two defective tubes get mixed up with two good ones. The tubes are tested one by one, until
both defectives are found. What is the probability the last defective tube is obtained on the:
a. second test? b) Third test? c) fourth
31. If 3 books are picked at random from a shelf containing 5 science books, 3 books of poems,
and a dictionary, what is the probability that
(a) The dictionary is selected?
(b) 1 book of poem and two science books are selected?
32. One bag contains 4 white balls and 3 black balls. The second bag contains 3 white balls and 5
black balls. One ball is drawn at random from the second bag and placed unseen in the first
bag. What is the probability that a ball now drawn from the first bag is white?
33. A lot consists of 20 defective and 80 non-defective items from which two items are chosen
without replacement. Events A & B are defined as A = {the first item chosen is defective}, B
= {the second item chosen is defective}.
a) What is the probability that both items are defective?
b) What is the probability that the second item is defective?
34. Let A and B be two events associated with an experiment and suppose that P(A) = 0.4 while
P(A ∪ B) = 0.7. Let P(B) = P
a) For what choice of P are A and B mutually exclusive?
b) For what choice of P are A and B independent?
35. If two events, A and B, are such that ( ) ( ) ( ) find
the following:
( | ) ( | ) ( | ∪ ) ( | ) ( | ∪ )
36. Draw Venn diagrams to verify De Morgan’s Laws. That is, for any two sets A and B,
(̅̅̅̅̅̅̅
∪ ) ̅ ̅ and (̅̅̅̅̅̅̅) ̅ ∪ ̅.
37. One bag contains 4 white balls and 3 black balls, and the second bag contains 3 white balls
and 5 black balls. One ball is drawn at random from the second bag and placed in the first
bag. What is the probability that a ball now drawn from the first bag is white?
38. A factory has two machines M1 and M2 making 60% and 40% respectively of the total
production. Machine M1 produces 3% defective items, and M2 produces 5% defective items.
Find the probability that a given defective part came from M1?