Finding Probabilities Use the probability distribution you made in Exercise 19 to find the probability of randomly selecting a household that has (a) one or two HD televisions
5. Binomial Distribution & Discrete Random Variables
Binomial Distribution
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The expected number of successes in a binomial experiment with n trials and probability of success p is ________.
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Tennis Challenge In a recent U.S. Open tennis tournament, there were 945 challenges made by singles players, and 255 of them resulted in referee calls that were overturned. The accompanying table lists the results by gender.
b. If one of the overturned calls is randomly selected, what is the probability that the challenge was made by a woman?
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Finding Binomial Probabilities In Exercises 19–26, find the indicated probabilities. If convenient, use technology or Table 2 in Appendix B.
Civil Rights Fifty-nine percent of U.S. adults think that civil rights for Black Americans have improved during their lifetime. You randomly select seven U.S. adults. Find the probability that the number who think that civil rights for Black Americans have improved during their lifetime is (a) exactly one and (b) exactly five. (Source: Gallup)
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In Exercises 6–10, refer to the accompanying table, which describes the numbers of adults in groups of five who reported sleepwalking (based on data from “Prevalence and Comorbidity of Nocturnal Wandering In the U.S. Adult General Population,” by Ohayon et al., Neurology, Vol. 78, No. 20).
Significant Events Is 4 a significantly high number of sleepwalkers in a group of 5 adults? Explain.
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In Exercises 1–7, consider a grocery store that can process a total of four customers at its checkout counters each minute.
The mean number of customers who arrive at the checkout counters each minute is 4. Create a Poisson distribution with mu = 4 for x = 0 to 20. Compare your results with the histogram shown at the upper right.
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40% of consumers believe that cash will be obsolete in the next 20 years (based on a survey by J.P. Morgan Chase). In each of Exercises 15–20, assume that 8 consumers are randomly selected. Find the indicated probability.
Find the probability that no more than 3 of the selected consumers believe that cash will be obsolete in the next 20 years.
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