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describing mutually exclusive events when are two events, a and b, mutu…

Question

describing mutually exclusive events
when are two events, a and b, mutually exclusive? check all that apply.
□ when they have no outcomes in common
□ when they are independent
□ when p(a or b) = p(a) + p(b)
□ when p(a or b) ≠ p(a) + p(b)
□ when knowing that a has or has not already occurred does not change the probability that b will occur
□ when p(a and b) = p(a) · p(b)

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. Option 1: when they have no outcomes in common

Mutually exclusive events cannot occur at the same time, so they share no common outcomes. This is a core definition of mutual exclusivity.

  1. Option 3: when \( P(A \text{ or } B) = P(A) + P(B) \)

For mutually exclusive events, the probability of \( A \) or \( B \) occurring is the sum of their individual probabilities (since \( P(A \text{ and } B) = 0 \), the general addition rule \( P(A \cup B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A \cap B) \) simplifies to \( P(A) + P(B) \)).

  1. **Option 4: when \( P(A \text{ or } B)

eq P(A) + P(B) \)**
This is incorrect. For mutually exclusive events, \( P(A \cup B) = P(A) + P(B) \), so this inequality does not hold.

  1. Option 2: when they are independent

Independent events are defined by \( P(A \cap B) = P(A)P(B) \), which is unrelated to mutual exclusivity (mutually exclusive events are dependent unless one has probability 0).

  1. Option 5: when knowing that \( A \) has or has not occurred does not change the probability that \( B \) will occur

This describes independence, not mutual exclusivity.

  1. Option 6: when \( P(A \text{ and } B) = P(A) \cdot P(B) \)

This is the formula for independent events, not mutually exclusive events (for mutually exclusive events, \( P(A \cap B) = 0 \)).

Answer:

  • when they have no outcomes in common
  • when \( P(A \text{ or } B) = P(A) + P(B) \)