Terrible conditional probability problems

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
1 reply · 2K views
kenny1999
Messages
235
Reaction score
5

Homework Statement



This is a problem I found on web but with no solutions.


n Exercise 11 from "Problems on Minterm Analysis," we have the following data: A survey of a represenative group of students yields the following information:
52 percent are male
85 percent live on campus
78 percent are male or are active in intramural sports (or both)
30 percent live on campus but are not active in sports
32 percent are male, live on campus, and are active in sports
8 percent are male and live off campus
17 percent are male students inactive in sports

Let A = male, B = on campus, C = active in sports.

(a) A student is selected at random. He is male and lives on campus. What is the (conditional) probability that he is active in sports?
(b) A student selected is active in sports. What is the(conditional) probability that she is a female who lives on campus?

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



I have tried. but don't know correct or not.
For (a) I think we are trying to find


P(C | A&B) = P( C & (A&B) ) / P(A&B)

but then I don't know how to find P(A&B). I don't know if A and B are mutually exlusive.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
hi kenny1999! :smile:

two useful tips:

i] use easy-to-recognise letters …

in this case, M for male, C for campus, and S for sport …

that makes it far less likely that you'll make a mistake! :wink:

ii] before you do anything else, rewrite all the data in terms of M C and S …

what do you get? :smile: