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Question 2
A group of office workers were questioned for a health magazine and \( \frac{2}{5} \) were found to take regular exercise. When questioned about their eating habits ... show full transcript
Step 1
Answer
To find the probability that a randomly selected member of the group always eats breakfast and takes regular exercise, we can use the conditional probability formula:
[ P(E \cap B) = P(E | B) \cdot P(B) ]
Here, we know that:
Calculating:
[ P(E \cap B) = \frac{9}{25} \cdot \frac{2}{3} = \frac{9 \cdot 2}{25 \cdot 3} = \frac{18}{75} = 0.24 ]
Thus, the probability that someone always eats breakfast and takes regular exercise is ( 0.24 ).
Step 2
Answer
We will calculate the probability of not eating breakfast and not taking regular exercise using the complement rule:
First, calculate the probability of always eating breakfast:
Next, calculate the probability of taking regular exercise:
Now calculate ( P(E') ):
Substituting these into the total:
[ P(E' \cap B') = P(E') \cdot P(B') = \frac{1}{3} \cdot P(E') ]
Thus, the probability that someone does not always eat breakfast and does not take regular exercise is approximately ( 0.173 ).
Step 3
Answer
To determine if the events 'always eating breakfast' (B) and 'taking regular exercise' (E) are statistically independent, we need to check the following condition:
[ P(E \cap B) = P(E) \cdot P(B) ]
From previous calculations, we found:
Now, calculate ( P(E) \cdot P(B) ):
[ P(E) \cdot P(B) = 0.36 \cdot 0.67 \approx 0.2412 ]
Since ( P(E \cap B) ) is not equal to ( P(E) \cdot P(B) ), we conclude that:
( P(E \cap B) \approx 0.24 \neq 0.2412 ). Thus, the events are not statistically independent.
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