PROBABILITY QUESTIONS Q1). You draw a card at random from a standard deck of 52 cards. Neither you nor anyone else looked at the card you picked. You keep it face down. Your friend then picks a card at random from a remaining 51 cards. a) What is the probability that your card is ace of spades? 1/52 b) What is the probability that your friend’s card is ace of spades? (Hint: Construct the sample space for what your friend’s card can be.) 1/51 c) You turn over your card and it is 10 of
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Please state clearly all assumptions made. 1. Classify each random variable as discrete or continuous. (a) The number of visitors to the Museum of Science in Boston on a randomly selected day. (b) The camber-angle adjustment necessary for a front-end alignment. (c) The total number of pixels in a photograph produced by a digital camera. (d) The number of days until a rose begins to wilt after it is purchased from a flower shop. (e) The runnning time for the latest James Bond movie. (f) The blood
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Construct a deductive argument that is valid but not sound. Then‚ construct a valid deductive argument that is sound. Be sure to put the argument in premise-conclusion form. Your initial post should be at least 150 words in length. Respond to at least two of your classmates’ posts by Day 7. When responding to your classmates‚ consider why the sound deductive argument might be seen by some as being valid but not sound. Pistachios are very addictive‚ Mike eats a lot of pistachio ice cream because
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Hadley Smith uses indirect and direct characterization to evince how Hadley is a clumsy and unlucky person. Hadley first reveals her clumsy sides by forgetting her stuff‚ making everything drop on the floor or being late for her plane. Not only she misses her plane‚ but she also has to sleep in a tiny airport chamber‚ being claustrophobic. Smith says “Or later: if she hadn’t given herself a paper cut while printing out her ticket‚ if she hadn’t lost her charger‚ if there hadn’t been traffic on the
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submit a review the “End-to-End Argument in System Design” paper [1]. In our your submission you need to briefly summarize the main idea(s) and contribution(s) of the paper. In particular‚ your review needs to address the following: 1. Discuss the three most important things the paper advocates‚ 2. Discuss the most glaring problem(s) with the paper‚ and 3. The paper was written with the design of the original Internet in mind. Discuss what impact‚ if any‚ may the argument presented in this paper
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Course paper in Philosophy of Science and Ethics Title: The relevance of Statistics and Probability for the study of the thermodynamics properties (The Maxwell-Boltzmann Theory) Abstract There are many philosophical debates as to the appropriateness of the use of statistics and probability as scientific research measures. Many renowned philosophers believe that since scientific investigation aims at the ultimate goal of presenting truth about the observations and processes in our universe
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versus Deductive Arguments – can concepts of (strength and cogency) and (validity and soundness) be used interchangeably? Unlike deductive arguments‚ inductive arguments are not truth preserving. That is‚ even if an inductive argument has a good logical form‚ it will never be the case that if the premises are true‚ the conclusion must be true. The most that an inductive argument can hope for is that it’s highly probable that its conclusion is true. In other words‚ a good inductive argument is such
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The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight Love at first sight is a controversial subject because it’s a matter of believing in fate or not. Fate is a peculiar thing‚ at that. In The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith‚ the main characters‚ Hadley and Oliver‚ meet against all odds on a modern day flight to England from America. Oliver‚ is the British boy Hadley never imagined she would ever meet let alone fall head over heels for in such a short period of
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Descriptive Statistics and Probability Distribution Problem Sets Emily Noah QNT561 Anthony Matias December 24‚ 2012 Descriptive Statistics and Probability Distribution Problems Sets Descriptive statistics and probability distribution is two ways to find information with certain data giving. In Descriptive statistics the data can give a mode‚ mean‚ median‚ and range by the numerical information‚ which is giving to find the information. In probability distribution the data is collected and
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relationship of how the probability of infection affects the people in the village when it is increased or decreased. This will determine whether the people in the village die or not from the epidemic. As the probability of infection is increased‚ the more people in the village will die. This is because the villagers are more likely to contract the disease‚ putting them at a higher risk of dying to the epidemic. As an example more people will survive in the village if the probability of infection
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