![]() | ME290M
Spring 1999, T-Th 12:30-2:00 pm
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Due Date: Thursday, March 18, 1999
Due Date: Thursday, March 18, 1999
Give five examples of facts from the mechanical engineering (or your own discipline) domain that are difficult to represent and manipulate in classical predicate logic. Express them in one of the following representations (use the one you consider most appropriate for the problem): fuzzy logic, default reasoning or probabilistic logic. If none of these representations are appropriate, what do you recommend?
Pr(A+B) = Pr(A) + Pr(B) Pr(A+B)
Hint: Any event X+Y can be written in the form X+(X'Y) where X and X'Y are mutually exclusive. Also, write B as the union of two mutually exclusive sets.
Three bins contain some working and some defective components as follows:
|
Bin |
Good |
Bad |
|
1 |
8 |
2 |
|
2 |
3 |
1 |
|
3 |
2 |
2 |
Over a long period of time, 20 percent of components are drawn from bin 1, 30 percent from bin 2 and 50 percent from bin 3.
Fred is considering the purchase of a disk drive and is trying to decide among three brands. The following table shows his preferences and the probability of drive crashes within one year (preferences are a funtion of cost, speed, capacity, and reliability):
|
Brand |
Probability of Choosing |
Probability of Crash |
|
X |
0.3 |
0.1 |
|
Y |
0.5 |
0.3 |
|
Z |
0.2 |
0.6 |
(a) Make a table showing the outcomes, and prior, conditional, joint, and posterior probabilities.
(b)What percentage of people who test positive don't have the disease (false positive)?
(c) What percentage of people who test negative do have the disease (false negative)?
To show that pairwise independence does not necessarily mean mutual independence, define the following events for the toss of two dice.
A = even first die
B = even second die
C = even sum
(a) Draw the sample space of the two dice. Draw A, B, and AB.
(b) Write the elements of AB, C, AC and BC.
(c) What is Pr(C)?
(d) Show the pairwise independence of
Pr(AB)+Pr(A)Pr(B)
Pr(AC)=Pr(A)Pr(C)
Pr(BC)=Pr(B)Pr(C)
(e) Show Pr(ABC)=Pr(AB) is NOT EQUAL to Pr(AB) Pr(C), which proves that pairwise independence does not mean mutual independence.
For mutually exclusive sets A and B
(a) What is Pr(A|B') expressed in terms of A and B (not expressed in terms of A and B')?
(b) What is the numeric value of Pr(A'|B)?
(c) What is the numeric value of Pr(A|B)?
(d) What is Pr(A'|B') expressed in terms of A and B (not expressed in terms of A' and B')?
(e) What is
(i) Pr(A|B) + Pr(A'|B)?
(ii) Pr(A|B') + Pr(A'|B')?
A disk drive may malfunction with either fault F1 or F2, but not both. The possible symptoms are:
A = Event that there are both {bad writes, bad reads}.
B = Event of {bad reads}
And F2 is three times as likely to occur as F1.
For this type of drive:
Pr(A|F1)=0.4
Pr(A|F2)=0.2
Pr(B|F1)=0.6
Pr(B|F2)=0.8
What is Pr(F1|A)?, Pr(F1|B)? Pr(F2|A)?, Pr(F2|B)? You may assume the symptoms (A, B or C) can only happen if a failure occurs (i.e., if F1 or F2 occurs).
Extra Credit: Define C = Event of (bad writes}. What is Pr(F1|C) and Pr(F2|C)?
Of three finalists in a design competition, named A, B, and C, one will be announced the official winner the next day. The panel has met and the Judge has made his final decision. Competitor A assigns a probability of 1/3 to the event that any one of the three competitors will win. Being curious, Competitor A tries to get some information out of the Judge without asking directly. He knows that regardless of who wins, at least one of the other two competitors will be losers (both if A is the winner). He asks the Judge to give him the name of one of the losers. The Judge, however, refuses to grant the request, arguing that if A knew which of the other two was a loser, the probability that A would be the winner would increase to 1/2 instead of 1/3. Do you agree with the Judge's argument? If so use conditional probability to verify his statement. If not use the axioms and theorems of probability and event algebra to find the probability that A is the winner given that the Judge names B or C as one of the losers. Assume that if both B and C are losers, the Judge would be equally likely to pick either one.
Hint: In problems of this kind, it is important to define precisely the events. It may be helpful to define the following events:
A = Competitor A wins
B = Competitor B wins
C = Competitor C wins
Ja = Judge says B loses
Jb = Judge says C loses
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Last updated: 8 March 99