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Combined and Conditional Probability

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
P8·P9

Independent Events (P8)

Two events are independent if the outcome of one does not affect the probability of the other.

Multiplication rule for independent events:

Worked example — two fair dice are rolled. Find .

Tree diagram with replacement — drawing maintains the same probabilities at every stage because the original composition is restored.

Worked example — a bag contains 4 red and 6 blue balls. Two draws with replacement. Find .

Underlying assumption: independence requires that drawing one ball does not change the composition of the bag — only valid when sampling with replacement.

Dependent Events — Without Replacement (P8)

When an item is not replaced, the probabilities on the second draw depend on what happened first.

Worked example — a bag has 5 red and 3 blue balls. Two balls are drawn without replacement. Find .

First draw:

Second draw (given red drawn first): (4 red remain out of 7 total)

Worked example — find :

;

Conditional Probability — Definition (P9 Higher)

The conditional probability is the probability of given that has occurred:

Worked example — from a two-way table:

CoffeeTeaTotal
Male151025
Female81725
Total232750

Note: — the conditioning event changes the denominator.

Conditional Probability from Venn Diagrams (P9 Higher)

Using a Venn diagram with known frequencies, conditional probabilities are found by restricting to the given set.

Worked example students: studies Art (), studies Biology (), .

— given the student studies Biology, look only within the Biology set.

Expected frequencies approach (P9 Higher): instead of fractions, set up a 100-person (or 1000-person) table with expected counts matching the given probabilities, then read off the conditional probability directly.

Worked example, , . Use a frequency tree of 1000 people to find .

From 1000: : 400 people; : ; : 600 people; : .

Total : .

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Combining Rules — OR and AND (P8)

For mutually exclusive events (cannot both happen):

For non-mutually exclusive events:

Worked example — from a pack of 52 cards, find .

; ; (king of hearts)

Checking independence: and are independent if and only if .

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Without replacement — not adjusting the second probability

After drawing a red ball from a bag of 5R and 3B without replacing it, the second draw has 7 balls remaining, not 8. Failing to reduce both the favourable count and the total is a very common error.

2. Conditional probability — using the wrong denominator

has denominator (or in frequency form), not the total sample size. Read "given " as "restrict to the circle/row/column."

3. Adding independent probabilities instead of multiplying

for independent events uses multiplication. Adding gives for mutually exclusive events — a different quantity.

4. Assuming all combined events are independent

Cards, balls without replacement, and real-world paired events are often dependent. Confirm whether items are replaced or whether the events can influence each other before choosing a method.

MistakeCorrection
"P(red twice without replacement) = "Second draw: , not — one red is gone
""These are equal only in special cases; use
"P(heart or ace) = P(heart) + P(ace) = "Subtract the overlap: ; answer

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Probability — Basics and Possibility Spaces

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