Bayes' Rule with a binomial distribution The question is as follows: Each morning, an intern is supposed to call 10 people and ask them to take part in a survey. Every person called has a 1/4 probability of agreeing to take the survey, independent of any other people’s decisions. Eighty percent of the days, the intern does what they are supposed to; however, the other twenty percent of the time, the intern is lazy and only calls 6 people. One day, exactly 1 person agree to take the survey. What is the probability the intern was lazy that day? My solution is partially shown using Bayes' Rule with the binomial distribution. Let L be the event he is lazy and let O be the event of one person agreeing to the survey. Then, P(L∣O)=(P(O∣L)P(L))/(P(O∣L)P(L)+P(O∣LC)P(LC)). We know P(O∣L)=(P(O cap L)

obojeneqk

obojeneqk

Answered question

2022-09-15

Bayes' Rule with a binomial distribution
The question is as follows:
Each morning, an intern is supposed to call 10 people and ask them to take part in a survey. Every person called has a 1/4 probability of agreeing to take the survey, independent of any other people’s decisions. Eighty percent of the days, the intern does what they are supposed to; however, the other twenty percent of the time, the intern is lazy and only calls 6 people. One day, exactly 1 person agree to take the survey. What is the probability the intern was lazy that day?
My solution is partially shown using Bayes' Rule with the binomial distribution. Let L be the event he is lazy and let O be the event of one person agreeing to the survey. Then,
P ( L O ) = P ( O L ) P ( L ) P ( O L ) P ( L ) + P ( O L C ) P ( L C ) .
We know
P ( O L ) = P ( O L ) P ( L ) = ( 6 1 ) ( 1 4 ) ( 3 4 ) 5 1 5 1.7798
and
P ( O L C ) = P ( O L C ) P ( L C ) = ( 10 1 ) ( 1 4 ) ( 3 4 ) 9 4 5 .2346 .
I would plug this into the Bayes' Rule equation, but I got a probability above 1 in one of the cases. Why?

Answer & Explanation

William Collins

William Collins

Beginner2022-09-16Added 12 answers

P ( O L ) = P ( X = 1 ) P ( L ) where X ~ Bin(0.25, 6).
so P ( O | L ) should be about 1.7798 / 5 0.35 instead.
Just think about it logically. The probability of both events being true means that he has to be lazy first, and given he is lazy, what is the probability of him getting one successful survey taker.

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