Problem 53E In Exercise, use counting principles to find the probability. A corporation has six male senior executives and four female senior executives. Four senior executives are chosen at random to attend a technology seminar. What is the probability of choosing (a) four men? ________________ (b) four women? ________________ (c) two men and two women? ________________ (d) one man and three women?
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C
1
Introduction to Statistics
1 and 2
Cumulative Review
1.PAT
1.R
1.1
An Overview of Statistics
1.2
Data Classification
1.3
Data Collection and Experimental Design
2
Descriptive Statistics
2.PAT
2.1
Frequency Distributions and Their Graphs
2.2
More Graphs and Displays
2.3
Measures of Central Tendency
2.4
Measures of Variation
2.5
Measures of Position
3
Probability
3-5
Cumulative Review
3.PAT
3.R
3.T
3.1
Basic Concepts of Probability and Counting
3.2
Conditional Probability and the Multiplication Rule
3.3
The Addition Rule
3.4
Additional Topics in Probability and Counting
4
Discrete Probability Distributions
4.PAT
4.R
4.T
4.1
Probability Distributions
4.2
Binomial Distributions
4.3
More Discrete Probability Distributions
5
Normal Probability Distributions
5.R
5.1
Introduction to Normal Distributions and the Standard Normal Distribution
5.2
Normal Distributions: Finding Probabilities
5.3
Normal Distributions: Finding Values
5.4
Sampling Distributions and the Central Limit Theorem
5.5
Normal Approximations to Binomial Distributions
6
Confidence Intervals
6-8
Cumulative Review
6.1
Confidence Intervals for the Mean (S Known)
6.2
Confidence Intervals for the Mean (S Unknown)
6.3
Confidence Intervals for Population Proportions
6.4
Confidence Intervals for Variance and Standard Deviation
7
Hypothesis Testing with One Sample
7.1
Introduction to Hypothesis Testing
7.2
Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (S Known)
7.3
Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (S Unknown)
7.4
Hypothesis Testing for Proportions
7.5
Hypothesis Testing for Variance and Standard Deviation
8
Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples
8.1
Testing the Difference Between Means (Independent Samples, S1 and S2 Known)
8.2
Testing the Difference Between Means (Independent Samples, S1 and S2 Unknown)
8.3
Testing the Difference Between Means (Dependent Samples)
8.4
Testing the Difference Between Proportions
9
Correlation and Regression
9 and 10
Cumulative Review
9.1
Correlation
9.2
Linear Regression
9.3
Measures of Regression and Prediction Intervals
9.4
Multiple Regression
10
Chi-Square Tests and the F -Distribution
10.1
Goodness-of-Fit Test
10.2
Independence
10.3
Comparing Two Variances
10.4
Analysis of Variance
Textbook Solutions for Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World
Chapter 3.R Problem 4CT
Question
Problem 4CT
The table shows the results of a survey in which 28,295 adults were asked whether they had a cold or the flu on the previous day. (Adapted from Gallup)
|
Colds |
Flu |
Neither |
Total |
Smoker |
526 |
153 |
4,980 |
5,659 |
Nonsmoker |
1,494 |
430 |
20,712 |
22,636 |
Total |
2,020 |
583 |
25,692 |
28,295 |
A person is selected at random from the sample. Find the probability of each event.
(a) The person had a cold
(b) The person had a cold or the flu
(c) The person had neither illness, given that the person is a smoker
(d) The person had neither illness, given that the person is a nonsmoker
(e) The person is a smoker, given that the person had the flu
(f) The person had the flu or is a nonsmoker
(g) The person had a cold and is a smoker
Title
Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World 6
Author
Ron Larson; Betsy Farber
ISBN
9780321911216