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How is a two-way frequency table used to approximate conditional probabilities?(1 point) Responses by writing the ratio of the...Asked by AAA
                How is a two-way frequency table used to approximate conditional probabilities?(1 point)
Responses
by writing the ratio of the intersection of the two conditions with the given condition in the denominator and the preference in the numerator
by writing the ratio of the intersection of the two conditions with the given condition in the denominator and the preference in the numerator
by writing the totals for the two conditions from the table as a fraction, decimal, or percentage
by writing the totals for the two conditions from the table as a fraction, decimal, or percentage
by finding the average of the two conditions
by finding the average of the two conditions
by adding the two conditions and dividing by the total for the entire two-way frequency table
            
        Responses
by writing the ratio of the intersection of the two conditions with the given condition in the denominator and the preference in the numerator
by writing the ratio of the intersection of the two conditions with the given condition in the denominator and the preference in the numerator
by writing the totals for the two conditions from the table as a fraction, decimal, or percentage
by writing the totals for the two conditions from the table as a fraction, decimal, or percentage
by finding the average of the two conditions
by finding the average of the two conditions
by adding the two conditions and dividing by the total for the entire two-way frequency table
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                    Answered by
            GPT-4o mini
            
    A two-way frequency table is used to approximate conditional probabilities **by writing the ratio of the intersection of the two conditions with the given condition in the denominator and the preference in the numerator**. This means that to find the conditional probability of one event given another, you take the frequency count corresponding to the category of interest and divide it by the total number of occurrences of the given condition from the table.
    
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