QUIZ
QUIZ
QUIZ
Objectives
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
Before you proceed with this lesson, you should be able to identify the elements of a set and the domain and the range of a
function.
Consider the set of colors in a rainbow. The elements of that set are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
All of those elements constitute the sample space of that set.
Recall that the domain of a function is the set of values of x while the range is the set of values of y. For example, the set
of ordered pairs {(2,5),(3,7),(4,9),(5,11)} is a function with domain {2,3,4,5} and range {5,7,9,11}
Example
Consider a random experiment of tossing a fair coin three times. In this scenario, the domain can be defined as the set of all
possible outcomes of the experiment and the range of the random variable as the total number of tails that comes out after tossing
a coin three times.
Let Y be the number of tails in the tossing of fair coin three times (the random variable).
For each element in the domain, there is a corresponding value for the random variable Y.The specific value of a random variable
is denoted by small letter y. The domain and range of the random variable Y are shown in the table below:
.
Therefore, the possible values of the random variable are 0, 1, 2, 3.
A discrete random variable is a random variable whose set of all possible values are countable or infinitely countable. It can be
represented as separate points on a number line.
A continuous random variable is a random variable whose set of all possible values are not countable or infinite. It can be
represented as an interval.
Explore
Consider the place where you are right now, be it a classroom, living room, or a library. Can you name one discrete random
variable and one continuous random variable related to the things that you can see? How do you get the values of those random
variables?
Try it!
Determine whether the following variables is discrete or continuous.
Key Points
Random variable is a function that takes on all the possible outcomes of an experiment and assigns for each of them a
corresponding real number.
Discrete random variables are countable or countably infinite.
Continuous random variables are not countable or infinite.
Name: _____________________________________________________SCORE:______________________
Constructing Probability Mass Function and Computing for the Probability of a Random Variable
1. What do you call a random variable that involves a finite number of outcomes?
a. Finite
b. Continuous
c. Discrete
d. infinite
2. What is the graph of probability mass function called?
a. bar graph
b. Histogram
c. pie chart
d. probability polygon
3. Which of the following statements is true?
a. The range of the probabilities in a probability mass function is 0 to 0.6.
b. The range of the probabilities in a probability mass function is 0 to 0.4.
c. The range of the probabilities in a probability mass function is 0 to 0.8.
d. The range of the probabilities in a probability mass function is 0 to 1.
4. What is the probability of drawing a king from a deck of card?
a. 1/52
a. 1/13 b. 1/26
c. 1/4
5.
6. A certain experiment has three possible events. The probability of Event 1 is twice the probability
of Event 3. If the probability of Event 2 is 0.43, what is the probability of Event 3?
7.
8.
9.
10.