Statistics: Adding Z-Scores & Detectors Probability

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Adding Z-scores from different exams is not valid due to differing means and standard deviations, making comparisons between students inaccurate. For the probability problem involving two detectors, the correct approach is to calculate the probability that at least one machine detects the object. The formula for this is p(A v B) = p(A) + p(B) - p(A and B), where the events are independent. Using this method, the probability of at least one detector successfully detecting the object is indeed 91%. The calculations provided using both methods highlight the importance of understanding event independence in probability theory.
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Hi,

I'm taking a distance learning course in statistics so there are a few concepts that are not clear to me. First I was wondering if it was possible to add up Z scores. I have a problem in which two students have two different z scores on two exams. Peter has 1,69 on the first one and -0,13 on the second, and Mary has -0,21 on the first one and 1,07 on the second one. Can I add up the Z scores to say that Peter is better?

My second interrogation is with this problem. Two detectors have a probability = to 0,7 of detecting an object. A clerck puts an object under both machines simultaneously. What is the probability that one machine or the other detects it?

So I did MxN to get all the possibilities, =100 and then 7x7 for the detections. I got p=49%, but when I do a tree of all the possibilities, I get 91%. So I'm wondering which way should I solve this problem?
 
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Cyannaca said:
Hi,

I'm taking a distance learning course in statistics so there are a few concepts that are not clear to me. First I was wondering if it was possible to add up Z scores. I have a problem in which two students have two different z scores on two exams. Peter has 1,69 on the first one and -0,13 on the second, and Mary has -0,21 on the first one and 1,07 on the second one. Can I add up the Z scores to say that Peter is better?
Since these are on two exams, the z-scores regarding the first exam are incompatible with z-scores on the second exam. This is because the mean and standard deviation are probably different among the two exams.

My second interrogation is with this problem. Two detectors have a probability = to 0,7 of detecting an object. A clerck puts an object under both machines simultaneously. What is the probability that one machine or the other detects it?

So I did MxN to get all the possibilities, =100 and then 7x7 for the detections. I got p=49%, but when I do a tree of all the possibilities, I get 91%. So I'm wondering which way should I solve this problem?
I think it's safe to assume the two events, machine A detects it and machine B detects it, are independent. What you want to find is p(A v B), the probability that one machine or the other detects it. There is a formula that breaks up p(A v B) into other probabilities, one of them involving A ^ B, the event that both machine detect it. This last probability can be further broken down using the independence of the events. I think 91% is right.
 
Is there a mathematical formula I can use that will give me 91%? I get this answer by drawing a tree of possibilities and MxN gives me 49%...
 
Cyannaca said:
Is there a mathematical formula I can use that will give me 91%? I get this answer by drawing a tree of possibilities and MxN gives me 49%...
Yes.

What you want to find is p(A v B), the probability that one machine or the other detects it. There is a formula that breaks up p(A v B) into other probabilities, one of them involving A ^ B, the event that both machine detect it. This last probability can be further broken down using the independence of the events. I think 91% is right.
 
answer to second question:

0,7*0,3*2=42 percent
because if one machine detects it and the other doesn't, this event's occurring has a probability of 0,7*(1-0,7)=0,7*0,3=0,21

then whatif the other detects it and this one doesn't, so 0,21*2=0,42
 
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