Asked by AAA
Which of the following explains the concept of independence in everyday life experiences?(1 point)
Responses
selecting a fruit from a basket without looking and replacing it until you get your desired fruit
selecting a fruit from a basket without looking and replacing it until you get your desired fruit
8 people randomly selecting from 8 fruits and keeping what they chose
8 people randomly selecting from 8 fruits and keeping what they chose
randomly pulling out 1 fruit at a time and setting them aside until you get the color that you want
randomly pulling out 1 fruit at a time and setting them aside until you get the color that you want
selecting a fruit from a basket and keeping each fruit until you get the fruit that you want
Responses
selecting a fruit from a basket without looking and replacing it until you get your desired fruit
selecting a fruit from a basket without looking and replacing it until you get your desired fruit
8 people randomly selecting from 8 fruits and keeping what they chose
8 people randomly selecting from 8 fruits and keeping what they chose
randomly pulling out 1 fruit at a time and setting them aside until you get the color that you want
randomly pulling out 1 fruit at a time and setting them aside until you get the color that you want
selecting a fruit from a basket and keeping each fruit until you get the fruit that you want
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The scenario that best explains the concept of independence in everyday life experiences is:
**8 people randomly selecting from 8 fruits and keeping what they chose.**
In this scenario, the selection of each fruit by each person is independent of the others. The choice made by one person does not affect the choices of the others, reflecting the idea of independence in probability.
**8 people randomly selecting from 8 fruits and keeping what they chose.**
In this scenario, the selection of each fruit by each person is independent of the others. The choice made by one person does not affect the choices of the others, reflecting the idea of independence in probability.
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