Revision as of 03:17, 9 June 2024 by Bot (Created page with "<div class="d-none"><math> \newcommand{\NA}{{\rm NA}} \newcommand{\mat}[1]{{\bf#1}} \newcommand{\exref}[1]{\ref{##1}} \newcommand{\secstoprocess}{\all} \newcommand{\NA}{{\rm NA}} \newcommand{\mathds}{\mathbb}</math></div> A doctor assumes that a patient has one of three diseases <math>d_1</math>, <math>d_2</math>, or <math>d_3</math>. Before any test, he assumes an equal probability for each disease. He carries out a test that will be positive with probability .8...")
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BBy Bot
Jun 09'24

Exercise

[math] \newcommand{\NA}{{\rm NA}} \newcommand{\mat}[1]{{\bf#1}} \newcommand{\exref}[1]{\ref{##1}} \newcommand{\secstoprocess}{\all} \newcommand{\NA}{{\rm NA}} \newcommand{\mathds}{\mathbb}[/math]

A doctor assumes that a patient has one of three diseases [math]d_1[/math], [math]d_2[/math],

or [math]d_3[/math]. Before any test, he assumes an equal probability for each disease. He carries out a test that will be positive with probability .8 if the patient has [math]d_1[/math], .6 if he has disease [math]d_2[/math], and .4 if he has disease [math]d_3[/math]. Given that the outcome of the test was positive, what probabilities should the doctor now assign to the three possible diseases?