HomeWHICHWhich Of The Following Events Are Mutually Exclusive

Which Of The Following Events Are Mutually Exclusive

Mutually Exclusive: can’t happen at the same time.

Examples:

  • Turning left and turning right are Mutually Exclusive (you can’t do both at the same time)
  • Tossing a coin: Heads and Tails are Mutually Exclusive
  • Cards: Kings and Aces are Mutually Exclusive

What is not Mutually Exclusive:

  • Turning left and scratching your head can happen at the same time
  • Kings and Hearts, because we can have a King of Hearts!

Like here:

Probability

Let’s look at the probabilities of Mutually Exclusive events. But first, a definition:

Mutually Exclusive

When two events (call them “A” and “B”) are Mutually Exclusive it is impossible for them to happen together:

P(A and B) = 0

“The probability of A and B together equals 0 (impossible)”

But, for Mutually Exclusive events, the probability of A or B is the sum of the individual probabilities:

P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B)

“The probability of A or B equals the probability of A plus the probability of B”

So, we have:

  • P(King and Queen) = 0
  • P(King or Queen) = (1/13) + (1/13) = 2/13

Special Notation

Instead of “and” you will often see the symbol (which is the “Intersection” symbol used in Venn Diagrams)

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Instead of “or” you will often see the symbol (the “Union” symbol)

So we can also write:

  • P(King Queen) = 0
  • P(King Queen) = (1/13) + (1/13) = 2/13

Remembering

To help you remember, think:

Not Mutually Exclusive

Now let’s see what happens when events are not Mutually Exclusive.

Example: Hearts and Kings

Hearts and Kings together is only the King of Hearts:

But Hearts or Kings is:

  • all the Hearts (13 of them)
  • all the Kings (4 of them)

But that counts the King of Hearts twice!

So we correct our answer, by subtracting the extra “and” part:

16 Cards = 13 Hearts + 4 Kings − the 1 extra King of Hearts

Count them to make sure this works!

As a formula this is:

P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A and B)

“The probability of A or B equals the probability of A plus the probability of B minus the probability of A and B”

Here is the same formula, but using and :

P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A ∩ B)

A Final Example

16 people study French, 21 study Spanish and there are 30 altogether. Work out the probabilities!

This is definitely a case of not Mutually Exclusive (you can study French AND Spanish).

Let’s say b is how many study both languages:

  • people studying French Only must be 16-b
  • people studying Spanish Only must be 21-b

And we get:

And we know there are 30 people, so:

And we can put in the correct numbers:

So we know all this now:

  • P(French) = 16/30
  • P(Spanish) = 21/30
  • P(French Only) = 9/30
  • P(Spanish Only) = 14/30
  • P(French or Spanish) = 30/30 = 1
  • P(French and Spanish) = 7/30
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Lastly, let’s check with our formula:

P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A and B)

Put the values in:

30/30 = 16/30 + 21/30 − 7/30

Yes, it works!

Summary:

Mutually Exclusive

  • A and B together is impossible: P(A and B) = 0
  • A or B is the sum of A and B: P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B)

Not Mutually Exclusive

  • A or B is the sum of A and B minus A and B: P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A and B)

Symbols

  • And is (the “Intersection” symbol)
  • Or is (the “Union” symbol)

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