Q:

The blood type O negative is called the "universal donor" type because it is the only blood type that may safely be transfused into any person. Therefore, when someone needs a transfusion in an emergency and their blood type cannot be determined, they are given type O negative blood. For this reason, donors with this blood type are crucial to blood banks. Unfortunately, this blood type is fairly rare; according to the Red Cross, only 7 percentage of U.S. residents have type O negative blood. Assume that a blood bank has recruited 20 unrelated donors. (State calculator entry and give 4 decimal places) What is the probability that fewer than three of them will have type O negative blood? What is the probability that more than 4 of them have type O negative blood? Find the probability that none of the donors had type O negative blood. Would this be unusual? Explain. What is the mean of the number of donors who have type O negative blood for a group this size? What is the standard deviation of the number of donors who have type O negative blood for a group this size?

Accepted Solution

A:
Answer:Probability that fewer than three of them will have type O negative blood: P(x<3)=0.6047Probability that more than 4 of them have type O negative blood: P(x>4)=0.0472Probability that none of the donors had type O negative blood: P(x=0)=0.2342Mean of the number of donors who have type O negative blood for a group this size: E=1Standard deviation of the number of donors who have type O negative blood for a group this size: SD=2Step-by-step explanation:These experiments behave as binomial distribution:P(x)=[tex]\frac{n!}{x!(n-x)!}. p^x.(1-p)^{n-x}[/tex]where:x: donors have type O negative bloodp: success outcome (0.07)n: unrelated donors (20)Fewer than three donors will have type O negative blood:P(x<3)=P(x=0)+P(x=1)+P(x=2)=[tex]\frac{20!}{0!(20-0)!}. (0.07)^0.(1-0.07)^{20-0}[/tex]+[tex]\frac{20!}{1!(20-1)!}. (0.07)^1.(1-0.07)^{20-1}[/tex]+[tex]\frac{20!}{2!(20-2)!}. (0.07)^2.(1-0.07)^{20-2}}[/tex]P(x<3)=0.2342+0.3526+0.2521=0.8389More than 4 of donors have type O negative blood:P(x>4)=1-P(x<4)= 1 - P(x=0) - P(x=1) - P(x=2) - P(x=3)= 1 - 0.2342 - 0.3526 - 0.2521 - 0.1139=0.0472None of the donors had type O negative blood: P(x=0)=[tex]\frac{20!}{0!(20-0)!}. (0.07)^0.(1-0.07)^{20-0}[/tex]=0.2342Mean of the number of donors who have type O negative blood:E=nΓ—p=20Γ—0.07=1.4β‰…1The mean number of donors that have type O negative blood is 1.Standard deviation of the number of donors who have type O negative blood:SD=[tex]\sqrt{npq}[/tex]=[tex]\sqrt{20*0.07*0.93}[/tex]=1.5β‰…2The standard deviation of the distribution of donors that have type O negative blood is 2.