Elementary Probability Theory
Elementary Probability Theory
THEORY
WHAT IS PROBABILITY?
• Intuition
• Relative frequency
• Law of large numbers
• In the long run, as the sample size increases and increases, the relative frequencies of
outcomes get closer and closer to the theoretical (or actual) probability value.
If both parents have brown eyes and have genotype Bl, what is the probability that their child will
have blue eyes? What is the probability the child will have brown eyes?
Example:
• Professor Gutierrez is making up a final exam for a course in literature of the Southwest. He wants
the last three questions to be of the true-false type. In order to guarantee that the answers do not
follow his favorite pattern, he lists all possible true-false combinations fro three questions on slips of
paper and then picks one at random from a hat.
• What is the probability that all three items will be false?
• What is the probability that exactly two items will be true?
COMPLEMENT OF AN EVENT
• The sum of all the probabilities assigned to outcomes in a
sample space must be 1.
p+q = 1 since the sum of probabilities of the outcomes must
be equal to one
q=1-p
For event A, the event not A is called the complement of A
To compute the probability of the complement of A, we use
P(not A) = 1 – P(A)
The important facts about probabilities are: