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Whole numbers are written on cards and then placed in a bag. Pilar selects a single card, writes down the number, and then places it back in the bag. She repeats this 46 times. Pilar calculates the relative frequency of each number card. Outcome 1 2 3 4 5 Relative Frequency 0.05 0.35 0.26 0.13 0.21 Which statement about Pilar's experiment is true? The outcomes do not appear to be equally likely, so a uniform probability model is not a good model to represent probabilities in Pilar's experiment. The outcomes appear to be equally likely, so a uniform probability model is not a good model to represent probabilities in Pilar's experiment. The outcomes do not appear to be equally likely, so a uniform probability model is a good model to represent probabilities in Pilar's experiment. The outcomes appear to be equally likely, so a uniform probability model is a good model to represent probabilities in Pilar's experiment.

2 Answers

1 vote
relative frequency (i think)
User Caleb
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Answer: The outcomes do not appear to be equally likely, so a uniform probability model is not a good model to represent probabilities in Pilar's experiment.

Step-by-step explanation: These outcomes are stretched out, which means they arent likely, and uniform probability models are used for models with close aka equally likely numbers

User Iskandarblue
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