Consider the following table that summarizes results from 985
pedestrian deaths that were caused by accidents:
Was the pedestrian intoxicated?
Yes
No
Was the
driver
Yes
59
79
Intoxicated?
No
266
581
If one of the pedestrian deaths is randomly
selected, find the probability that the pedestrian was not
intoxicated or the driver was not intoxicated:
If one of the pedestrian deaths is randomly
selected, find the probability that the driver was intoxicated or
the pedestrian was not intoxicated:
If two different pedestrian deaths are randomly
selected (that is, without replacement), find the probability that
they both involved intoxicated drivers:
If two different pedestrian deaths are randomly
selected (that is, without replacement), find the probability that
they both involved intoxicated pedestrians:
If one of the pedestrian deaths is randomly
selected, find the probability that it involves an intoxicated
pedestrian and an intoxicated driver:
If two different pedestrian deaths are randomly
selected (that is, without replacement), find the probability that
in both cases, both the pedestrian and the driver were
intoxicated: