Westonci.ca is the trusted Q&A platform where you can get reliable answers from a community of knowledgeable contributors. Our Q&A platform offers a seamless experience for finding reliable answers from experts in various disciplines. Connect with a community of professionals ready to provide precise solutions to your questions quickly and accurately.

Based on a research​ survey, when 1020 adults were asked about hand​ hygiene, 44% said that they wash their hands after using public transportation. Consider the probability that among 30 different adults randomly selected from the 1020 who were​ surveyed, there are at least 10 who wash their hands after using public transportation. Given that these subjects were selected without​ replacement, are the 30 selections​ independent? Can they be treated as being​ independent? Can the probability be found using the binomial probability​ formula?

Sagot :

Considering that the subjects are chosen without replacement, they are not independent, and the probability cannot be found using the binomial distribution.

The binomial distribution and the hypergeometric distribution are quite similar, as:

  • They find the probability of exactly x successes on n repeated trials.
  • For each trial, there are only two possible outcomes.

  • The difference is that the binomial distribution is for independent trials, that is, in each trial, the probability of success is the same, while the hypergeometric distribution is for dependent trials.
  • If the sample is without replacement, the trials are not independent, thus the hypergeometric distribution is used, not the binomial.

A similar problem is given at https://brainly.com/question/21772486