Question
Question: A person is known to speak the truth 4 times out of 5. He throws a die and reports that it is an ace...
A person is known to speak the truth 4 times out of 5. He throws a die and reports that it is an ace. The probability that it is actually an ace is
A.31
B.92
C.94
D.95
Solution
Here we will be using the concept of probability and Bayes Theorem. For this question we have two conditions, first the person speaks truth and second, he throws a die.
Whenever we have two conditions, we follow the Bayes rule
Complete step by step solution:
The rules have a very simple derivation that directly leads from the relationship between faint and conditional probabilities
Equation of Bayes rule:
P(A/B)=P(B)P(B/A)P(A)
A is the event we want the probability of.
B is the new event that is related to A in the same way.
P(A/B) is called the posterior this is what we are trying to
P(B/A) is called the likelihood, this is the probability of observing the new event
A person is speaking the truth 4 times out of 5. After that he throws a die and mentions it is an ace.
Probability of speaking truth is given as: P(A)=54
Probability of getting ace from die is given as: P(B)=61
Probability of not getting ace can be calculated as:
P(Aˉ)=1−61 =65
And, the probability of not speaking truth is calculated as:
P(Bˉ)=1−54 =51
Probability of actually getting ace is calculated using the Bayes’ Rules:
Hence, the probability that it is actually an ace is 94 .
Option C is correct.
Note: In these types of problems, Bayes’ rule should be cleared and knowledge of terms of probability is essential such as:
Event: For a random experiment, an event is any possible set of outcomes.
Outcome: An outcome of random experiment is any one of the possible results of the experiment.
Random Experiment: A random experiment is an experiment for which the set of possible outcomes is known.