Looking for confirmation on probability homework question?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the probability of selecting at least one woman from a programming team of 17 women and 15 men when three people are chosen. Initially, the poster calculates the probability using combinations but is unsure about the correctness of their approach. They explore the method of subtracting the probability of selecting no women from 1, ultimately arriving at the correct calculation of 1 - (15C3 / 32C3) = 0.908. The final consensus confirms that this method is valid and yields the correct probability. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding the problem's requirements and using appropriate probability techniques.
Topgun_68
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Looking for confirmation on probability!

Sorry, posted in wrong forum. It was a probability question which is why I posted it here. Can someone move it to homework section if need be. Thanks!
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Can someone let me know if I am doing this correctly, because the answer I am getting seems to small. I thought the probability would be much higher since the woman out number the men by over 50% and we are just looking for 1.

Question: Suppose that a programming team has 17 women and 15 men. Three people must be chosen to work on a special project. What is the probability that the group selected has at least 1 women in it?

My work:

(17C1) -> To choose 1 women
(15C2) -> To choose 2 men
(32C3) -> Total groups of 3 among all people

(17C1)(15C2)
--------------
32C3 17 * 105
--------
4960

1785
----- = .360
4950 I've seem some examples where they subtract this answer from 1 which not looks more reasonable, but is it correct and can someone explain why?

ex.. 1 - .360 = .640

Thanks for any input!
 
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Read the statement carefully: at least one woman.
 
Ahh, so would I use:

(17C1 + 17C2 + 17C3) / 32C3 to account for having 1,2 or 3 women chosen? Or would I have to account for the 8 possibilities of women/men?

Thanks for feedback. I hope this doesn't get deleted for my lack of reading. I was just getting ready to erase it and repost..

DrClaude said:
Read the statement carefully: at least one woman.
 
Topgun_68 said:
(17C1 + 17C2 + 17C3) / 32C3 to account for having 1,2 or 3 women chosen?
Not quite. If you have for instance exactly 2 women, is the number of possiblities 17C2? Aren't you forgetting something?

And this might be a good time to use the other method you mention: 1 - something.
 
I'm forgetting the men.. So would it be..

(17C1)(15C2) + (17C2)(15C1) + 17C3
-------------------------------------
32C3

I was thinking of subtracting the result from 1. Do I have to account for no women..



DrClaude said:
Not quite. If you have for instance exactly 2 women, is the number of possiblities 17C2? Aren't you forgetting something?

And this might be a good time to use the other method you mention: 1 - something.
 
Topgun_68 said:
I'm forgetting the men.. So would it be..

(17C1)(15C2) + (17C2)(15C1) + 17C3
-------------------------------------
32C3
Right.

Topgun_68 said:
I was thinking of subtracting the result from 1.
Why would you do that? Calculate the value numerically and see what makes sense. There is a way to calculate the initial problem as 1-something. Can you figure that one out?

Topgun_68 said:
Do I have to account for no women..
Account in what way?
 
Hmm, I think I got it now.

1 - ((15C3) / (32C3)) = .908

So calculate the probability of no women from the total, than subtract it from 1.

I calculated it my long way above and I get the same answer. Can you confirm this is correct :<)

Thanks for your help on this.
DrClaude said:
Right.

DrClaude said:
Right.Why would you do that? Calculate the value numerically and see what makes sense. There is a way to calculate the initial problem as 1-something. Can you figure that one out?Account in what way?
 
Topgun_68 said:
Hmm, I think I got it now.

1 - ((15C3) / (32C3)) = .908

So calculate the probability of no women from the total, than subtract it from 1.

I calculated it my long way above and I get the same answer. Can you confirm this is correct :<)
That is indeed correct.

Topgun_68 said:
Thanks for your help on this.
You're welcome!
 
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