I have taken an example from my statistical notes 1 and 2 to show the process of calculating the marginal, conditional and joint probabilities using the data presented in a contingency table, also ...
Joint probability is the probability of two events happening together. For example, if you toss a coin twice, the joint probability of getting heads both times is 0.25, or 25%. In a contingency table, ...
We elaborate on an alternative representation of conditional probability to the usual tree diagram. We term the representation “turtleback diagram” for its resemblance to the pattern on turtle shells.
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