Critical Thinking: Interpreting results from a test for smoking It is estimated that roughly half of smokers lie when asked about their smoking involvement. Pulse CO-oximeters may be a way to get information about smoking without relying on patients’ statements. Pulse CO-oximeters use light that shines through a fingernail, and it measures carbon monoxide in blood. These devices are used by firemen and emergency departments to detect carbon monoxide poisoning, but they can also be used to identify smokers. The accompanying table lists results from people aged 18–44 when the pulse CO-oximeter is set to detect a 6% or higher level of carboxyhemoglobin (based on data from “Carbon Monoxide Test Can Be Used to Identify Smoker,” by Patrice Wendling, Internal Medicine News, Vol. 40., No. 1, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention).

CO-Oximetry Test for Smoking

PositiveTest Result

Negative Test Result

Smoker

49

57

Non-smoker

24

370

Analyzing the Results

True Positive Based on the results in the table, find the probability that a subject smoke, given that the test result is positive.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The probability that a subject is a smoker, given that the test result is positive, is 0.671.

Step by step solution

01

Given information

The table summarizes the test results for smoking.

CO-Oximetry test for smoking

Positive test result

Negative test result

Smoker

49

57

Non-smoker

24

370

02

State the formula of conditional probability

Conditional probability of event B occurring, given that event A has already occurred.

PBA=PAand BPA

03

Find the probabilities

Let event A denotes positive test results and event B denotes that a subject is a smoker.

Total number of subjects are 500.

Using the given information,

PA=Number of subjects whose test result is positiveTotal number of subjects=73500PA and B=Number of subjects who are smoker and test result is positiveTotal number of subjects=49500

04

Calculate conditional probability 

The true positive is defined as the probability that the subject is a smoker, given the test result is positive.

It is computed as,

PBA=PSubject is smoker and test result is positivePTest result is positivePBA=PAand BPA...1

Substituting the values in equation (1),

PBA=4950073500=0.671

Therefore, the probability that a subject is a smoker, given that the test result is positive, is 0.671.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Denomination Effect. In Exercises 13–16, use the data in the following table. In an experiment to study the effects of using a \(1 bill or a \)1 bill, college students were given either a \(1 bill or a \)1 bill and they could either keep the money or spend it on gum. The results are summarized in the table (based on data from “The Denomination Effect,” by Priya Raghubir and Joydeep Srivastava, Journal of Consumer Research, Vol. 36).

Purchased Gum

Kept the Money

Students Given A \(1 bill

27

46

Students Given a \)1 bill

12

34

Denomination Effect

a. Find the probability of randomly selecting a student who kept the money, given that the student was given four quarters.

b. Find the probability of randomly selecting a student who kept the money, given that the student was given a $1 bill.

c. What do the preceding results suggest?

Redundancy. Exercises 25 and 26 involve redundancy.

Redundancy in Computer Hard Drives It is generally recognized that it is wise to back up computer data. Assume that there is a 3% rate of disk drive failure in a year (based on data from various sources, including lifehacker.com).

a. If you store all of your computer data on a single hard disk drive, what is the probability that the drive will fail during a year? continued 158 CHAPTER 4 Probability

b. If all of your computer data are stored on a hard disk drive with a copy stored on a second hard disk drive, what is the probability that both drives will fail during a year?

c. If copies of all of your computer data are stored on three independent hard disk drives, what is the probability that all three will fail during a year?

d. Describe the improved reliability that is gained with backup drives

Subjective Probability Estimate the probability that the next time you turn on a light switch, you discover that a bulb does work.

In Exercises 25–32, find the probability and answer the questions.

Genetics: Eye Color Each of two parents has the genotype brown/blue, which consists of the pair of alleles that determine eye color, and each parent contributes one of those alleles to a child. Assume that if the child has at least one brown allele, that color will dominate and the eyes will be brown. (The actual determination of eye color is more complicated than that.)

a. List the different possible outcomes. Assume that these outcomes are equally likely.

b. What is the probability that a child of these parents will have the blue/blue genotype?

c. What is the probability that the child will have brown eyes?

At Least One. In Exercises 5–12, find the probability.

Probability of a Girl Assuming that boys and girls are equally likely, find the probability of a couple having a boy when their third child is born, given that the first two children were both girls.

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