Recap the Rule as a First Branch
The Multiplication Rule said:
A tree draws this:
- First branches = the first draw
- Later branches carry the conditional second probability
The Tree and Its First-Level Branches
First draw: red is 3/5, blue is 2/5.
The Second-Level Branches Are Conditional
After the first draw, the urn has changed:
- After red: 2 red, 2 blue left →
, - After blue: 3 red, 1 blue left →
,
Multiply Along a Single Tree Path
Each complete path is a sequence of "and" steps:
Along a path, you multiply — it's the Multiplication Rule on the branches.
Add Across Paths for "One of Each"
"One of each" happens two ways — add their path probabilities:
P(one of each) = 3/5
Finish the addition:
Multiply along each path, then add the two paths — one of each color is 3/5.
Multiply Along, Add Across the Tree
Two moves, two directions on the tree:
- Along a path = "and" (sequential) → multiply
- Across paths = "or" (different ways) → add
Moving along a path multiplies; combining whole paths adds.
The Four Paths Sum to 1
A built-in check: every complete path, added up, must total 1.
If your paths don't sum to 1, a branch probability is wrong.
Multiply or Add for This Step?
You want
Do you multiply the two branch probabilities, or add them?
Decide before advancing — which direction are you moving?
When the First Doesn't Change the Second
What if drawing with replacement — returning the marble each time?
Then the urn resets, and the second draw's probabilities don't change.
That's independence — and the tree simplifies.
Independence: P(B | A) = P(B)
When
- The conditional factor becomes the plain probability
- The simple product rule is this special case
Compare: With vs Without Replacement
- With replacement (independent):
- Without (dependent):
Why the Without-Replacement Answer Is Smaller
Removing the first king makes a second king less likely:
Fewer kings remain, so the conditional second factor (3/51) is smaller than 4/52.
Your Turn: Compute and Interpret
A bin has parts, and you sample two without replacement. Given
Find
Compute, then say it in plain words about the parts.
Two Common Errors to Watch For
Adding along a path: like
Along a path is "and" — multiply. Add only across separate paths.
Wrong conditional: mixing
With a sequence, condition the later event on the earlier one.
Multiply Along, Add Across — Then Interpret
✓ Later tree branches carry conditional probabilities
✓ Multiply along a path; add across paths
✓ Independent events reduce the rule to
Next: permutations and combinations — counting the huge favorable and total sets these probabilities need.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Apply the general Multiplication Rule