Ge-Mm - Sets 4
Ge-Mm - Sets 4
2.4
Section Applications of Sets
Surveys: An Application of Sets
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Surveys: An Application of Sets
Counting problems occur in many areas of applied
mathematics. To solve these counting problems, we often
make use of a Venn diagram and the inclusion-exclusion
principle, which will be presented in this section.
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Example 2 – A Music Survey
A music teacher has surveyed 495 students. The results of
the survey are listed below.
320 students like rap music.
395 students like rock music.
295 students like heavy metal music.
280 students like both rap music and rock music.
190 students like both rap music and heavy metal music.
245 students like both rock music and heavy metal music.
160 students like all three.
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Example 2 – A Music Survey
How many students
a. like exactly two of the three types of music?
b. like only rock music?
c. like only one of the three types of music?
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Example 2 – Solution
a. The survey shows that 245 students like rock and heavy
metal music, so the numbers we place in regions i and iv
must have a sum of 245.
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Example 2 – Solution cont’d
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Example 2 – Solution cont’d
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The Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
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The Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
A music director wishes to take the band and the choir on a
field trip. There are 65 students in the band and 30 students
in the choir. The number of students in both the band and the
choir is 16. How many students should the music director
plan on taking on the field trip?
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The Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
See the Venn diagram below. Adding the numbers of
students in regions i, ii, and iii gives us a total of
49 + 16 + 14 = 79 students that might go on the field trip.
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The Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
Although we can use Venn diagrams to solve counting
problems, it is more convenient to make use of the following
technique.
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The Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
The reason we subtract the 16 students is that we have
counted each of them twice. Note that first we include the
students that are in both the band and the choir twice, and
then we exclude them once.
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Example 3 – An Application of the Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
Solution:
and let
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Example 3 – Solution cont’d
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The Inclusion-Exclusion Principle
The inclusion-exclusion formula can be adjusted and
applied to problems that involve percents. In the following
formula we denote “the percent in set A” by the notation
p(A).
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Example 5 – An Application of the Percent Inclusion-Exclusion Formula
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