AP Statistics 2017

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
1.

This    can also    be  done    on  the TI-83/84    by  putting the X values    in  L1 and  the probabilities   in  L2  .   Then
1-Var Stats L1,L2 will give the above values for the mean and standard deviation.



  1.          (a)         P   (A  and B)  =   P   (A) ·   P   (B  |   A)  =   (0.6)(0.5)  =   0.30.

    (b) P (A or B) = P (A) + P (B) – P (A and B) = 0.6 + 0.3 – 0.3 = 0.6
    (Note that the 0.3 that is subtracted came from part (a).)
    (c) P (B) = 0.3, P (B|A) = 0.5. Since P (B) ≠ P (B|A), events A and B are not independent.



  2. (a) Let X represent the score a student earns. We know that X has approximately N (500, 90). What
    we are looking for is shown in the following graph.


P (X > 600) = 1 – 0.8667 = 0.1333.

The calculator  answer  is  normalcdf(600,10,000,500.900)   =0.1333 (remember   that    the upper
bound must be “big”—in this exercise, 10,000 was used to get a sufficient number of standard
deviations above 600).
(b) We already know, from part (a), that the area to the left of 600 is 0.8667. Similarly we determine
the area to the left of 450 as follows:

Then

P   (450    <   X < 600)    =   0.8667  –   0.2877  =   0.5790.

There   are 0.5790  (9000)  ≈   5211    scores.
[This could be done on the calculator as follows: normalcdf (450,600, 500,90) = 0.5775.]
(c) This situation could be pictured as follows.
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