What is Conditional probability: Definition and 242 Discussions

In probability theory, conditional probability is a measure of the probability of an event occurring, given that another event (by assumption, presumption, assertion or evidence) has already occurred. If the event of interest is A and the event B is known or assumed to have occurred, "the conditional probability of A given B", or "the probability of A under the condition B", is usually written as P(A|B), or sometimes PB(A) or P(A/B). For example, the probability that any given person has a cough on any given day may be only 5%. But if we know or assume that the person is sick, then they are much more likely to be coughing. For example, the conditional probability that someone unwell is coughing might be 75%, in which case we would have that P(Cough) = 5% and P(Cough|Sick) = 75%.
Conditional probability is one of the most important and fundamental concepts in probability theory. But conditional probabilities can be quite slippery and might require careful interpretation. For example, there need not be a causal relationship between A and B, and they don't have to occur simultaneously.
P(A|B) may or may not be equal to P(A) (the unconditional probability of A). If P(A|B) = P(A), then events A and B are said to be independent: in such a case, knowledge about either event does not alter the likelihood of each other. P(A|B) (the conditional probability of A given B) typically differs from P(B|A). For example, if a person has dengue, they might have a 90% chance of testing positive for dengue. In this case, what is being measured is that if event B ("having dengue") has occurred, the probability of A (test is positive) given that B (having dengue) occurred is 90%: that is, P(A|B) = 90%. Alternatively, if a person tests positive for dengue, they may have only a 15% chance of actually having this rare disease, because the false positive rate for the test may be high. In this case, what is being measured is the probability of the event B (having dengue) given that the event A (test is positive) has occurred: P(B|A) = 15%. Falsely equating the two probabilities can lead to various errors of reasoning such as the base rate fallacy. Conditional probabilities can be reversed using Bayes' theorem.
Conditional probabilities can be displayed in a conditional probability table.

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  1. R

    Is my Handout wrong? Stumped Conditional Probability

    Conditional Probability... My handout says this... P(m) = .4 P(w) = .5 P(m|w) = .7 Find: P(MnW) = ? P(w|m) = ? P(m or w) = ? P(MnW) = .4 x .5 = .2 P(w|m) = .35/.4 = .875 P(m or w) = ?
  2. D

    Conditional Probability with combinatorics

    If a hand of 5 cards are dealt from a 52 card pack (order doesn't matter), what is the probability that the hand will contain the ace of spades GIVEN that there is at least one ace? Thanks.
  3. O

    What Is the Probability Mrs. Z Correctly Identified the Car Color?

    Homework Statement A particular brand of cars, say ABC, comes in only two colours, white and grey. Exactly 90% of ABC cars in a particular town are white and 10% are grey. Mrs Z, a witness to a bank robbery, claims to have seen the thieves escaping in an ABC grey car, which taking into...
  4. B

    How do I compute P(y>x) given f(x) and f(y|x)?

    Homework Statement Given f(x) = e^-x and f(y|x) = 1/x e^(-y/x). Three parts: (a) Compute density of (x,y), (b) Compute E(y) and (c) Compute P(y>x). Homework Equations f(x,y) = f(y|x)f(x) if f(x) = ve^(-vx), then E(x)=v^(-1) The Attempt at a Solution I'm stuck on a problem. I was...
  5. B

    How to Compute Conditional Probability Without Deriving f(y)

    I'm stuck on a problem. I was given f(x) and f(y|x) and was able to derive f(x,y). The second step of the problem is computing P[y>x]. I think I need to know f(y) to answer this problem but I can't figure out how to derive it. Or is there a way to compute P(y>x) given the info I know without...
  6. E

    Conditional Probability and the Independence of Events

    I'm having trouble with one of the rules of probability P(A n B) = P(A)P(B) which holds if events A and B are independent The following problem illustrates my confusion. I've defined Events A and B below, are these events dependent? Per the solution in the book P(A \cap B) = P(A)P(B)...
  7. A

    Probability - Conditional Probability

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  8. T

    Interperting a solution involving conditional probability.

    Homework Statement a family consisting of a father, mother, and a child is chosen at random and is asked on what day of the week each of them was born. What is the probability that all three were born on different days given that the father was born on a monday? Solution: A is the even all...
  9. C

    Conditional Probability (with integrals)

    Homework Statement Suppose a person's score X on a math aptitude test is a number between 0 and 1, and their score Y on a music aptitude test is also between 0 and 1. Suppose further that in the population of all college students in Canada, the scores X and Y are distributed according to the...
  10. D

    Conditional probability density function

    Please help me with this. Any suggestions are greatly appreciated. Imagine that I have a bank account. X is the amount of cash on the account at time t+1. Y is the amount of cash at time t. The amount of cash depends on the deposits made and on the amount of cash during the previous period...
  11. S

    Conditional Probability of children

    This is probably relatively easy, but I'm still a bit confused... The question: A family has j children with probability p1 = .1, p2 = .25, p3 = .35, p4 = .3. A child is randomly chosen. Given this child is the eldest in the family, find the conditional probability that a) Family has 1...
  12. H

    Calculating Conditional Probability for a given Event (a=1)

    Hello, This question relates to Bayes law. I think my problem is I am not sure of the name of the thing I am trying to derive... I have 2 variables a and b. a = 1 or 0, b = 0...n I have the data to calculate; p(a = 1 and b) p(b) for any b. Hence I can find p(a=1|b) = p(a = 1 and...
  13. L

    Need help conditional probability

    hi all, I have a question that i really want to know the answer. the probability that an airplane will return in 10min is 30%, in 20min is 30%, in 30min is 0%, in 40min is 40% according to the past history records. given that the airplane has not return in 20min, what is the probability...
  14. Demystifier

    Joint probability from conditional probability?

    Hi, I am a quantum physicist who needs a practical help from mathematicians. :smile: The physical problem that I have can be reduced to the following mathematical problem: Assume that we have two correlated variables a and b. Assume that we know all conditional probabilities P(a|b), P(b|a)...
  15. S

    Conditional Probability and Bayes' Formula Questions

    Dear all, Please clarify the following: 1.) The difference of conditional probability and Bayes' formula. 2.) Is Bayes' formula a "all weather condition" formula for all conditional probabilities problem? Thank you, S
  16. S

    Conditional Probability (confusing)

    Dear all, P (A |B) + P (A c|B) = 1 [A c] denotes complement of set A and of course P (B)>0 Is the above statement true? How about the following two: P (A |B) + P (A |B c) = 1 P (C ∪ D|B) = P (C |B) + P (D|B) − P (C ∩ D|B)
  17. F

    Conditional Probability Question

    Homework Statement In a shipment of 100 televisions, 6 are defective. If a person buys two televisions from that shipment, what is the probability that both are defective? Homework Equations the Answer is somewhat weird! it says it is 1/330 ! which is really beyond by recognition...
  18. J

    Statistical Comparision between Conditional Probability

    Suppose X1 Y1 Z1 0 0 0 (5 times Z1 is 0 for X1=0 and Y1=0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 . . . Which is.. (Same table which is above..) X1 Y1 Z1 (Count of Zeros) (Count of...
  19. A

    Conditional probability using dependent and independent tests

    Hi, I'm trying to work out a probability value from a number of distributions (tests), it gets a little complicated because some of the tests are dependent on each other. Lets say I have a surface which has black and white regions distributed over it, where black is "true" and white is "false"...
  20. M

    Conditional probability and sum of rvs question

    I'm trying to solve a problem as part of my research and it's giving me fits. It seems like it should be simple, but I can't wrap my brain around how to do it. The problem is: Suppose X~N(0,s), and Y is a random variable that has a probability mass point at 0 but is otherwise uniformally...
  21. S

    Conditional Probability in a card game

    Although this problem may look like homework, I assure you it is not. It is a question that arose from a trading card game that I am stuck on. The problem is as follows (with simplified cards) You have a deck of 53 cards, and 11 of those cards are red and 42 are black. If you were to randomly...
  22. Somefantastik

    Conditional Probability at it's finest

    In an election, candidate A receives n votes and candidate B receives m votes, where n>m. Assume that in the count of the votes all possible orderings of the n+m votes are equally likely. Let Pn,m denote the probability that from the first vote on A is always in the lead. Find Pn,m...
  23. Somefantastik

    Conditional Probability & Bayes' Theorem

    [Problem] Stores A, B, and C have 50, 75, and 100 employees, respectively, 50, 60, and 70 percent of these are women. Resignations are equally likely among all employees, regardless of sex. One employee resigns and this is a woman. What is the prob. she works in store C? [Solution] Store A...
  24. H

    How Do You Calculate Conditional Probability Using a Probability Tree?

    conditional probability help please Homework Statement Hi there, I am doing s1 for this jan and i am finding it very difficult to cope up. Especially for probability. I have a cgp buk but stil its not very gud at probability. Here is a question from my text buk which i cud not understand : -...
  25. E

    How Does Conditional Probability Affect the Chances of a Computer Starting?

    Homework Statement The probability of a monitor not working is 0.005, the probability of a cpu faulty is 0.002, the probability of a keyboard damaged is 0.0025, what is the probability of the computer switching on? If you are then told that the conditional probability of the monitor not...
  26. E

    How Does Conditional Probability Affect Computer Reliability Over Time?

    Homework Statement Assuming a comp is switched on, the probability that the monitor is not working is 0.005, the probability that the CPU is faulty is 0.02, and the probability that the keyboard cable has been damaged is 0.0025, and that there are no other faults. Proceed to evaluate the...
  27. K

    Conditional Probability of defective bulb

    I say urgent because of the horribly small lecture I received on this section, a whole 3 minutes or so of examples. While I won't give further context I can say without a doubt I am completely lost. Here is the problem I am stuck on. In a string of 12 Christmas tree light bulbs, 3 are...
  28. O

    Conditional probability problem - help need

    hi I got a stats problem infornt of me. I figured out that it is abaut conditional probability. But I am stuck :confused: . # hurricanes 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 probability .25 .33 .24 .11 .04 .02 .01 prob >6 is 0 questions are independent. a.)...
  29. E

    Conditional Probability formula

    At school we have begun conditional probability. Of course, using the conditional probability formula to answer questions is no problem; but i do not fully understand how the formula works. The formula is; Pr(A given or │ B)= Pr(A intersection B)/Pr(B) The the proof for it is self evident...
  30. C

    Conditional Probability - Teacher says I'm wrong

    Hi Everyone, Let's see if someone here can do a better job than my teacher! I have one of the least helpful stat teachers ever. She told me that I was wrong about the following problem. I am not saying that she is wrong or right, but when I asked her to explain why I was wrong, she told me...
  31. R

    How Do You Calculate the Probability of (C U A) Given (C n A)?

    Given: P(A)= .4, P(B)=.3, P(A n B)=.11, P(C| not A)=.5 If P(C U A) = .66, then find P[(C U A) | (C n A)]. I have been trying to manipulate this thing for a while now with no luck. Could you try and show the work if not that's alright, I'll work it out. Thanks.
  32. W

    Conditional probability equation, how is it derived?

    I have to admit I'm struck odd by the this definition: P(A|B) = P(AnB)/P(B) I know conditional probability is the "chance of event a dependant even B happening, given A happens". But really, I don't quite get it... what is meant?
  33. I

    Independence and conditional probability

    if X and Y are events which are independent of each other, but neither are independent with A, is this equality true for conditional probabilities: P( X, Y | A) = P(X|A) * P(Y|A) if not, how do you solve for P(A | X,Y) given that you only know P (A) and P(X|A) and P(Y|A)? The reason I came...
  34. N

    Conditional probability questions ?

    Please help me to solve the following questions : 1) There are three box : box X has 10 bulbs which 4 are defective Box Y has 6 bulbs which 1 are defective Box Z has 8 bulbs which 3 are defective a box is chosen at random...
  35. F

    Conditional probability question

    An insurance company runs three offices, A, B and C. The company's employess are distirbuted as follows; 30% work in office A, 20% in Off. B and 50% in Off. C. In office A 10% are managers, in office B 20% are managers and in office C 5% are managers a. What is the total proportion of...
  36. A

    What is the Conditional Probability of Finding a Book in a Specific Box?

    Somebody could help me to find out the answer of the interesting question about conditional probability ? "You are moving to other apartment and you need to find your probability book. It is inside of one box. There are n boxes to all. The probability of the book is inside of the box i is Pi...
  37. D

    Conditional probability marble question

    Q. A box contains three blue marbles, five red marbles, and four white marbles. If one marble is drawn at random, find: a) P(blue|not white) b) P(not red|not white) The answer for both a) and b) is 3/8. However right now I don't even understand the question. part a) wants possibility of...
  38. P

    Conditional Probability Traffic light question

    Hey guys Me and my friend just got this question and it seems easy but i just want to make sure we are right anyway here it is: A road has two stoplights at consecutive intersections. The prob. of a red at the first is 0.55 and the probability of a green at the second, give a green at light...
  39. A

    Question about conditional probability

    Question about conditional probability. Can someone help me ? Repulsion. The event A is said to be repelled by the event B is P(A|B) < P(A), and to be attracted by B P(A|B) > P(A). (a) Show that if B attracts A, then A attracts B, and ~B repels A. (b) If A attracts B, and B attarcts C...
  40. A

    Conditional probability - Random number of dice

    Can someone help me with this question ? A random number N of dice is thrown. Let Ai be the event that N = i, and assume that P(Ai) = 1/(2)^i, i >= 1. The sum of the scores is S. Find the probability that: (a) S = 4, given N is even; (b) the largest number shown by any die is r, where S...
  41. M

    What is the probability of a customer leaving a workshop happy?

    Ok guys, I don't really understand conditional probability, can you guys tell me how to go about solving this? To please customers, repairs need to be done satisfactorily and completed on time. For one mechanic, if the job is done on time, he has a 85% chance that it was also done...
  42. F

    A conditional probability question

    In a class of 15 students, 10 are expected to pass maths and 12 are expected to pass english. how many students are expected to pass maths and english? ----- the answer given in the book is 7. i don't understand how this answer was reached. could someone please show me how to calculate...
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