Probability in Geometry Reversed

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Last updated 12:36 AM on 6/12/26
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13 Terms

1
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number of favorable outcomes/number of possible outcomes

Theoretical Probability

2
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List of all possible outcomes for an experiment. Use fundamental counting principle to find.

Sample Space

3
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Used to find the number of events in the sample space for multiple-part events. Multiply the number of possible outcomes for each part together.

Fundamental Counting Principle

4
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The outcome of one event does not affect the probability of the next event.

Independent Events

5
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The outcome of one event affects the probability of the next event.

Dependent Events

6
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Multiply the probability of each event. (Coin flip and rolling even on a die would be (1/2)×(1/2)).

Probability of Independent/Dependent Events

7
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Complement of an event is basically the opposite of the event being considered. (if event is heads on a coin, complement is tails

complement

8
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read as "A bar," capital A with line over it.

Notation of Complement

9
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When we can't compute a theoretical probability for an event, we can gather data and base the probability on what has happened in the past.

Experimental Probability

10
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Events that have no common outcomes. In other words, both events cannot happen at the same time.

Disjoint/Mutually Exclusive Events

11
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Events that have at least one common outcome. In other words, both events can happen at the same time.

Overlapping Events

12
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P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B)

How to find P(A or B) in a disjoint event.

13
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P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B)

How to find P(A or B) in an overlapping event.