[Solution Library] Disjoint or independent? In Exercise 32 you calculated probabilities involving various blood types. Some of your answers depended on
Question: Disjoint or independent? In Exercise 32 you calculated probabilities involving various blood types. Some of your answers depended on the assumption that the outcomes described were disjoint; that is, they could not both happen at the same time. Other answers depended on the assumption that the events were independent; that is, the occurrence of one of them doesn't affect the probability of the other. Do you understand the difference between disjoint and independent?
- If you examine one person, are the events that the person is Type A and that the person is Type B disjoint, independent, or neither?
- If you examine two people, are the events that the first is Type A and the second Type B disjoint, independent, or neither?
- Can disjoint events ever be independent? Explain.
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