K kasser New Member Joined Jun 7, 2014 Messages 18 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Jun 17, 2014 #1 In a random experiment Pr(A) = 0.6 Pr(B)=0.54 and Pr (A intersection B') = 0.4 What is the intersection? Apparently it is 0.2? how do we achieve this? Last edited: Jun 17, 2014
In a random experiment Pr(A) = 0.6 Pr(B)=0.54 and Pr (A intersection B') = 0.4 What is the intersection? Apparently it is 0.2? how do we achieve this?
D Drongoski Well-Known Member Joined Feb 22, 2009 Messages 4,255 Gender Male HSC N/A Jun 17, 2014 #2 kasser said: In a random experiment Pr(A) = 0.6 Pr(B)=0.54 and Pr (A intersection B') = 0.4 What is the intersection? Apparently it is 0.2? how do we achieve this? Click to expand... It refers to the joint event of A and B occurring together. 'intersection' here refers to the intersection(overlap) of the sets A and B. But I don't understand are you are saying; what apparently is 0.2? Last edited: Jun 17, 2014
kasser said: In a random experiment Pr(A) = 0.6 Pr(B)=0.54 and Pr (A intersection B') = 0.4 What is the intersection? Apparently it is 0.2? how do we achieve this? Click to expand... It refers to the joint event of A and B occurring together. 'intersection' here refers to the intersection(overlap) of the sets A and B. But I don't understand are you are saying; what apparently is 0.2?
K Kurosaki True Fail Kid Joined Jul 14, 2012 Messages 1,167 Location Tubbytronic Superdome Gender Male HSC 2014 Jun 17, 2014 #3 Draw a Venn diagram? It should be easy to see from there.