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  1. #1
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    Difficult probability question



    I've gotten this off another forum (it hasn't been solved yet), and thought you guys might enjoy this problem. I don't need it solved as it's not my homework, so look elsewhere if your goal is to assist people.

    You have 9 grey balls, 7 blue balls, 5 green balls in a box. Each ball has an exactly even probability of being selected in a random draw. This even probability property remains the same, even after you've drawn the 1st ball (with or without replacement).

    What's the probability that, when you draw 5 balls (without replacement), you'll have selected 3 blue balls and 2 green balls?


    My current progress is in spoiler tags.

    Spoiler:
    Last edited by derksheng; 08-09-2012 at 12:17 AM.

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    Re: Difficult probability question

    Quote Originally Posted by derksheng View Post
    I've gotten this off another forum (it hasn't been solved yet), and thought you guys might enjoy this problem. I don't need it solved as it's not my homework, so look elsewhere if your goal is to assist people.

    You have 9 grey balls, 7 blue balls, 5 green balls in a box. Each ball has an exactly even probability of being selected in a random draw. This even probability property remains the same, even after you've drawn the 1st ball (with or without replacement).

    What's the probability that, when you draw 5 balls (without replacement), you'll have selected 3 blue balls and 2 green balls?


    My current progress is in spoiler tags.

    Spoiler:

    Why doesn't this work:

    Pr\left \{ 0,3,2 \right \}=\frac{\binom{9}{0}\binom{7}{3}\binom{5}{2}}{\binom{21}{5}}

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    Re: Difficult probability question

    hi Dragan,

    Is that correct?

    I now think we should be using permutations for the [itex]|\Omega_1|[/itex].

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    Re: Difficult probability question

    Quote Originally Posted by derksheng View Post

    I now think we should be using permutations...[itex]|\Omega_1|[/itex].
    I don't think so because the question at hand states that you're sampling without replacement.

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    Re: Difficult probability question

    Your solution could very well be correct. A friend's simulation is coming up with 2.2% [don't know how long he ran it for], your solution gives 1.7%.

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    Re: Difficult probability question

    Quote Originally Posted by derksheng View Post
    Your solution could very well be correct.
    Yes, it's correct.

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    Re: Difficult probability question

    can you help me on this understanding issue .. Consider the sets of balls A:={a1,a2,a3} and B:={b1,b2,b3,b4} and a random drawing without replacement of 3 balls. \binom{7}{3}=35 which is wrong as our sample space cardinality because we can only have OMEGA={(a,a,a),(a,a,b),(a,b,b),(b,b,b),(b,b,a),(b,a,a),(a,b,a)} and |OMEGA| = 7.

    So that would mean our usage of \binom{21}{5} is incorrect?
    Last edited by derksheng; 08-09-2012 at 09:35 AM.

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    Re: Difficult probability question


    Quote Originally Posted by derksheng View Post
    can you help me on this understanding issue .. Consider the sets of balls A:={a1,a2,a3} and B:={b1,b2,b3,b4} and a random drawing without replacement of 3 balls. \binom{7}{3}=35 which is wrong as our sample space cardinality because we can only have OMEGA={(a,a,a),(a,a,b),(a,b,b),(b,b,b),(b,b,a),(b,a,a),(a,b,a)} and |OMEGA| = 7.

    So that would mean our usage of \binom{21}{5} is incorrect?
    Notice that first, in your listing, you missed (bab), so there are 8 combinations. Another way to think of this is that you have 2 choices for each of 3 items, so there must be 2^3 possibilities.

    More importantly, your calculation of \binom{7}{3}=35 assumes that all 7 objects are distinguishable. For this calculation (a1,b1,b2) is a different outcome than (a1,b1,b3). Your "brute force" listing misses this subtlety.

    John

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