Tough Probability

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Tough Probability

by luckypiscian » Sun Jul 14, 2013 8:00 pm
In a room filled with 7 people, 4 people have exactly 1 sibling in the room and 3 people have exactly 2 siblings in the room. If two individuals are selected from the room at random, what is the probability that those two individuals are NOT siblings?

5/21

3/7

4/7

5/7

16/21
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by vipulgoyal » Sun Jul 14, 2013 8:39 pm
divide 7 people into 2 groups: Group 1 including 4 people have exactly 1 sibling and Group 2 including 3 people have exactly 2 siblings
First person:
If he is from G1 (probability: 4/7), the probability that the second one is not his sibling: 5/6 so 4/7*5/6=10/21
If he is from G2 (probability: 3/7), the probability that the second one is not his sibling: 4/6 so 3/7*4/6=6/21
10/21+6/21=16/21

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by kuzzden » Sun Jul 14, 2013 8:47 pm
Hi, solution to this problem was posted several times, you can find it here:

https://www.beatthegmat.com/i-hate-proba ... tml#567143
https://www.beatthegmat.com/siblings-t66114.html
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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Sun Jul 14, 2013 10:04 pm
luckypiscian wrote:In a room filled with 7 people, 4 people have exactly 1 sibling in the room and 3 people have exactly 2 siblings in the room. If two individuals are selected from the room at random, what is the probability that those two individuals are NOT siblings?

5/21

3/7

4/7

5/7

16/21
First we need to recognize that the given information tells us that the 7 people consist of:
- a sibling trio
- a sibling pair
- and another sibling pair

Using counting techniques:

For this question, it's easier to find the complement.
So P(not siblings) = 1 - P(they are siblings)

P(they are siblings) = [# of ways to select 2 siblings] / [total # of ways to select 2 people]

# of ways to select 2 siblings
Case a) 2 siblings from the sibling trio: from these 3 siblings, we can select 2 siblings in 3C2 ways (3 ways)
Case b) 2 siblings from first sibling pair: we can select 2 siblings in 2C2 ways (1 way)
Case c) 2 siblings from second sibling pair: we can select 2 siblings in 2C2 ways (1 way)

So, total number of ways to select 2 siblings = 3+1+1 = 5

total # of ways to select 2 people
We have 7 people and we want to select 2 of them
We can accomplish this in 7C2 ways (21 ways)

So, P(they are siblings) = 5/21

This means P(not siblings) = 1 - 5/21
= [spoiler]16/21[/spoiler]

Cheers,
Brent
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
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