maualvarezcepedes maualvarezcepedes
  • 04-07-2020
  • Mathematics
contestada

Consider event A and event B. What is the probability that event B occurs, given that event A has already occurred? A. P(B A) P(A) ∙ P(B) B. P(B A) P(A) C. P(B A) P(B) D. P(B A) P(B)

Respuesta :

helloshdh5 helloshdh5
  • 04-07-2020

Answer:B

Step-by-step explanation:

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

If we rub two neutral objects​
Houses in an real estate are all identical however a person can purchase a new house with some all or none of a set of options as indicated by the set below how
I need this answer . I would be happy if I got it .
in insurance Dishonest tendencies that increase the probability of loss are what types of hazard?
Anyone have an idea how to create a NPV Spreadsheet which intakes a 6% discount factor. My actual question is very similar to this, If someone could give me a s
On average, 5 of every 200 customer calls at company A are complaint calls. What percentage of company A’s customer calls are complaint calls ?
as time passes the sound wave ​
Question from active-passive voices and vice versa​
Find the value of d.
The events "male” and "buys lunch” are not independent because P(buys lunch | male) = P(male) = 0.4. P(male | buys lunch) = P(male) = 0.3. P(buys lunch | male)