Determine whether the events E and F are independent or dependent. Justify your answer. ... (a) E: A person having a high GPA. F: The same person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials. O...


Determine whether the events E and F are independent or dependent. Justify your answer.<br>...<br>(a) E: A person having a high GPA.<br>F: The same person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials.<br>O A. E and F are independent because having a high GPA has no effect on the probability of a person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials.<br>VB.<br>E and F are dependent because being a heavy reader of assigned course materials can affect the probability of a person having a high GPA.<br>E and F are dependent because having a high GPA has no effect on the probability of a person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials.<br>OD.<br>E and F are independent because being a heavy reader of assigned course materials has no effect on the probability of a person having a high GPA.<br>(b) E: A randomly selected person at school A having a high GPA.<br>F: A randomly selected person at school B having a low GPA.<br>E cannot affect F and vice versa because the people were randomly selected, so the events are independent.<br>O B. E cannot affect F because

Extracted text: Determine whether the events E and F are independent or dependent. Justify your answer. ... (a) E: A person having a high GPA. F: The same person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials. O A. E and F are independent because having a high GPA has no effect on the probability of a person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials. VB. E and F are dependent because being a heavy reader of assigned course materials can affect the probability of a person having a high GPA. E and F are dependent because having a high GPA has no effect on the probability of a person being a heavy reader of assigned course materials. OD. E and F are independent because being a heavy reader of assigned course materials has no effect on the probability of a person having a high GPA. (b) E: A randomly selected person at school A having a high GPA. F: A randomly selected person at school B having a low GPA. E cannot affect F and vice versa because the people were randomly selected, so the events are independent. O B. E cannot affect F because "person 1 at school A having a high GPA" could never occur, so the events are neither dependent nor independent. E can affect the probability of F because the people were randomly selected, so the events are dependent. D. E can affect the probability of F, even if the two people are randomly selected, so the events are dependent. (c) E: The unusually foggy weather in London on May 8. F: The number of car accidents in London on May 8. A. The number of car accidents in London on May 8 could affect the unusually foggy weather in London on May 8, so E and F are dependent. OB. The unusually foggy weather in London on May 8 could not affect the number of car accidents in London on May 8, so E and F are independent. OC. The unusually foggy weather in London on May 8 could affect the number of car accidents in London on May 8, so E and F are dependent.
Jun 11, 2022
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