QUESTION IMAGE
Question
the following two - way table shows the distribution of high school students categorized by their grade level and book - type preference.
book - type preference
| fiction | nonfiction | total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| sophomore | 26 | 13 | 39 |
| total | 46 | 35 | 81 |
suppose a high school student is selected at random. let event a = junior and event b = fiction. are events a and b independent?
yes, p(a)=p(b|a)
no, p(a)≠p(b|a)
no, p(a)≠p(a|b)
yes, p(a)=p(a|b)
Step1: Calculate \(P(A)\)
Let \(A\) be some event (not clearly defined in terms of grade - level here, assume \(A\) is being a junior). \(P(A)=\frac{42}{81}\) since there are 42 juniors out of 81 total students.
Step2: Calculate \(P(A|B)\)
If \(B\) is the event of preferring fiction. \(P(A|B)=\frac{20}{46}\) because among the 46 students who prefer fiction, 20 are juniors.
Since \(\frac{42}{81}
eq\frac{20}{46}\), we check the independence condition. For two events \(A\) and \(B\) to be independent, \(P(A) = P(A|B)\).
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No, \(P(A)
eq P(A|B)\)