The Three Steps of the Table Test
= a margin total ÷ grand total = the other margin total ÷ grand total = the joint cell ÷ grand total
Then compare
Read the Exercise and Sleep Table
Compare and Find Them Dependent
, so the events are dependent- Exercisers sleep well more often than independence predicts
The data settled it — not the hunch.
Quick Check: What If They Matched?
Suppose
What would that tell you? Answer before advancing.
Answer: equal to the product → the events would be independent.
Intuition Isn't Enough — Compute
With real data, the hunch can mislead you.
- Pairs that feel unrelated can turn out dependent
- Pairs that feel related can turn out independent
You can't settle it by feel — compute the three probabilities and compare.
Two Relationships People Often Blur
People confuse two different relationships:
- Independent — knowing one doesn't change the other
- Mutually exclusive — the two can't both happen
They sound alike but mean opposite things about co-occurring. Let's separate them.
Independent Events Can Happen Together
Independent events can co-occur — joint probability is the positive product.
Mutually Exclusive: Cannot Both Happen
On one die roll, you can't roll a 2 and a 5 at once.
- Mutually exclusive events have joint probability zero
- They exclude each other — nothing overlaps
Zero joint probability is the signature of mutual exclusivity.
They Cannot Both Be True at Once
If
- Independent → joint = positive product
- Mutually exclusive → joint =
A number can't be positive and zero — so the same pair can't be both.
Your Turn: Classify and Justify
Draw one card. Events: "it's a king," "it's a queen."
- Independent, mutually exclusive, or neither?
- Compute
to justify
Work it yourself. One card can't be both — so what's the joint probability?
Watch Out: Two Errors to Retire
Independent ≠ mutually exclusive: one can co-occur (joint
Don't assume independence: with real data, compute and compare.
Name the relationship; compute the joint probability.
Key Takeaways and What's Next
✓ Test independence from a table: compare
✓ With real data, compute — don't guess
✓ Independent (can co-occur) ≠ mutually exclusive (joint
Two positive-probability events can't be both
Next: conditional probability — independence as
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Understand independence via the product rule