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Probability Discrete and Continuous Random Variables

Authored by Barbara White

Mathematics

11th - 12th Grade

Probability Discrete and Continuous Random Variables
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20 questions

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1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

The weight of written reports produced in a certain department has a Normal distribution with mean 60 g and standard deviation 12 g. The probability that the next report will weigh less than 45 g is

.1056
.3944
.1042
.8944

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Media Image

Is this a probability distribution?

No
Yes

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Media Image

Is this a probability distribution?

No
Yes

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

The probability of each value of the random variable must be between or equal to ________?

0
1
0 and 1
none of the above

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the difference between a discrete random variable and a continuous random variable?

A discrete random variable takes all values in an interval of numbers while a continuous random variable has a fixed set of possible values with gaps between.
A discrete random variable has a fixed set of possible values with gaps between while a continuous random variable takes all values in an interval of numbers.
A discrete random variable takes only negative numbers while a continuous random variable takes both positive and negative numbers.
A discrete random variable takes both positive and negative numbers while a continuous random takes only negative numbers.

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

If Gonzalo's score is 87%, the class average is 82%, and the SD is 4, what is Gonzalo's Z-score?

-1.25

+1.25

+1.20

+1.02

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

A marketing survey compiled data on the number of cars in households.  If X = the number of cars, and we omit the rare cases of more than 5 cars, then X has the following probability distribution: 
X         0         1         2       3         4        5 
P(X)  0.24  0.37  0.20  0.11  0.05  0.03
What is the probability that a randomly chosen household has at least two cars?

0.20
0.29
0.39
0.61

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