Introduction to Probability: Mutually Exclusive Events

Introduction to Probability: Mutually Exclusive Events

Introduction to Probability: Mutually Exclusive Events 200 166 School Tutoring

Two events are mutually exclusive if they cannot occur simultaneously.

Here are some examples of events which are mutually exclusive:

  • Turning left and turning right are mutually exclusive because you cannot do both at the same time
  • When you toss a coin, landing on heads or tails are mutually exclusive events
  • When choosing a single card, picking a King and an Ace are mutually exclusive

Here are some examples of events which are not mutually exclusive:

  • Turning left and scratching your head can happen at the same time
  • When choosing a single card; picking a King and a Heart are not mutually exclusive because you can pick a King of Hearts

When two events, A and B, are mutually exclusive it is impossible for them to happen together:

______P(A and B) = 0

______“the probability of A and B happening together equals 0”

The probability of A or B is the sum of the individual probabilities:

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

______“the probability of A or B equals the probability of A plus the probability of B”.

 

Example: A Deck of Cards

In a deck of 52 Cards:

______The probability of selecting a King is 1/13, so P(King) = 1/13

______The probability of selecting an Ace is also 1/13, so P(Ace) = 1/13

When we combine those two events:

______The probability of a card being a King and an Ace is 0. (It is impossible.)

______The probability of a card being a King or an Ace is (1/13) + (1/13) = 2/13

This is written like this:

______P(King and Ace) = 0

______P(King or Ace) = 1/13 + 1/13 = 2/13

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This article was written for you by Mia, one of the tutors with Test Prep Academy.