What You Will Be Able to Do
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
- Analyze a decision: strategies, outcomes, probabilities, payoffs
- Build a two-way table and compute
- Explain the base-rate effect for a rare condition
A 99% Accurate Test Says Positive
A disease test is 99% accurate. You test positive.
What's the chance you actually have the disease? Hold a guess.
A Six-Step Frame for Decisions
Identify strategies, outcomes, probabilities, payoffs — then compare and recommend.
Three Lenses for the Comparison
The comparison step uses whichever lens fits:
- Expected value — the average outcome
- Conditional probability — testing decisions
- Risk — worst-case and error costs
Three Decisions Share One Frame
The standard names three:
- Product testing — accept or reject a batch
- Medical testing — diagnose from a result
- Pulling the goalie — a strategic gamble
Predict the Answer Before Computing
A disease test is 99% sensitive and 99% specific. The disease affects 1% of people.
Of those who test positive, what fraction are truly sick? Commit before advancing.
Two Numbers Every Test Has
- Sensitivity — the true-positive rate (catches the sick)
- Specificity — the true-negative rate (clears the healthy)
- Both are below 100%, so errors exist
Set Up a Group of 10,000
Disease affects 1% of
- 100 are sick
- 9{,}900 are healthy
The Sick Group: 99 True Positives
Of the 100 sick people, the 99%-sensitive test catches:
The Healthy Group: 99 False Positives
Of 9,900 healthy, 1% test positive:
Count All of the Positives
Total positive results:
The Surprising Answer Is 50%
A "99% accurate" test gives a positive person a coin-flip chance of being sick.
Why: The Base-Rate Effect Dominates
The disease is rare, so the huge healthy group's few false positives match the sick group's true positives.
Why It Matters: Confirm Before Acting
A single positive is not a diagnosis.
This is why doctors order a confirmatory test before treatment.
Your Turn: A Different Test
A disease affects 2% of people. A test is 95% sensitive and 95% specific.
Of those who test positive, about what fraction are truly sick?
Mirror: Testing a Product Batch
Product testing has the same shape:
- Producer's risk — rejecting a good batch
- Consumer's risk — accepting a bad batch
What You Learned This Lesson
✓ A six-step frame organizes any decision
✓ For testing, the lens is conditional probability
✓ The base rate can drive
Coming Up Next: Strategy and Risk
Next: pulling the goalie — a decision that changes two probabilities at once.
Then risk and asymmetric error costs, where expected value alone falls short.