Difference between revisions of "2014 AIME II Problems/Problem 2"
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Arnold is studying the prevalence of three health risk factors, denoted by A, B, and C, within a population of men. For each of the three factors, the probability that a randomly selected man in the population has only this risk factor (and none of the others) is 0.1. For any two of the three factors, the probability that a randomly selected man has exactly these two risk factors (but not the third) is 0.14. The probability that a randomly selected man has all three risk factors, given that he has A and B is <math>\frac{1}{3}</math>. The probability that a man has none of the three risk factors given that he doest not have risk factor A is <math>\frac{p}{q}</math>, where <math>p</math> and <math>q</math> are relatively prime positive integers. Find <math>p+q</math>. | Arnold is studying the prevalence of three health risk factors, denoted by A, B, and C, within a population of men. For each of the three factors, the probability that a randomly selected man in the population has only this risk factor (and none of the others) is 0.1. For any two of the three factors, the probability that a randomly selected man has exactly these two risk factors (but not the third) is 0.14. The probability that a randomly selected man has all three risk factors, given that he has A and B is <math>\frac{1}{3}</math>. The probability that a man has none of the three risk factors given that he doest not have risk factor A is <math>\frac{p}{q}</math>, where <math>p</math> and <math>q</math> are relatively prime positive integers. Find <math>p+q</math>. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Solution== | ||
+ | |||
+ | We first assume a population of 100 to facilitate solving. Then we simply organize the statistics given into a Venn diagram: | ||
+ | |||
+ | <asy> | ||
+ | |||
+ | pair A,B,C,D,E,F,G; | ||
+ | A=(0,55); | ||
+ | B=(60,55); | ||
+ | C=(60,0); | ||
+ | D=(0,0); | ||
+ | draw(A--B--C--D--A); | ||
+ | E=(30,35); | ||
+ | F=(20,20); | ||
+ | G=(40,20); | ||
+ | draw(circle(E,15)); | ||
+ | draw(circle(F,15)); | ||
+ | draw(circle(G,15)); | ||
+ | |||
+ | draw("$A$",(30,52)); | ||
+ | draw("$B$",(7,7)); | ||
+ | draw("$C$",(53,7)); | ||
+ | |||
+ | draw("100",(5,60)); | ||
+ | draw("10",(30,40)); | ||
+ | draw("10",(15,15)); | ||
+ | draw("10",(45,15)); | ||
+ | |||
+ | draw("14",(30,16)); | ||
+ | draw("14",(38,29)); | ||
+ | draw("14",(22,29)); | ||
+ | |||
+ | draw("$x$",(30,25)); | ||
+ | draw("$y$",(10,45)); | ||
+ | |||
+ | </asy> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Now from "The probability that a randomly selected man has all three risk factors, given that he has A and B is <math>\frac{1}{3}</math>." we can tell that <math>\frac{x}{\frac{1}{3}}=14+x</math>, so <math>x=7</math>. Thus <math>y=21</math>. | ||
+ | |||
+ | So our desired probability is <math>\frac{y}{y+10+14+10}</math> which simplifies into <math>\frac{21}{55}</math>. So the answer is <math>21+55=\boxed{076}</math>. |
Revision as of 10:22, 28 March 2014
Problem
Arnold is studying the prevalence of three health risk factors, denoted by A, B, and C, within a population of men. For each of the three factors, the probability that a randomly selected man in the population has only this risk factor (and none of the others) is 0.1. For any two of the three factors, the probability that a randomly selected man has exactly these two risk factors (but not the third) is 0.14. The probability that a randomly selected man has all three risk factors, given that he has A and B is . The probability that a man has none of the three risk factors given that he doest not have risk factor A is , where and are relatively prime positive integers. Find .
Solution
We first assume a population of 100 to facilitate solving. Then we simply organize the statistics given into a Venn diagram:
Now from "The probability that a randomly selected man has all three risk factors, given that he has A and B is ." we can tell that , so . Thus .
So our desired probability is which simplifies into . So the answer is .