- Thu Jun 03, 2021 6:12 pm
#87583
Hi Ashpine,
Yes, our conclusion is that in a group of 100 people, most of those who test positive will be actual cocaine users. The key is that we don't know how many of the population are cocaine users. Let's say out of every million people, one has used cocaine. If you take a random sample of 100 people, you aren't likely to pull that one person. So that means that likely all the positives in that group of 100 would be false positives, not true positive. On the other hand, let's say that out of every million people, 999,999 have used cocaine. That means that it is likely in your group of 100 people that most of your positives are true positives. That is the flaw answer choice (C) is describing.
Hope that helps!
Yes, our conclusion is that in a group of 100 people, most of those who test positive will be actual cocaine users. The key is that we don't know how many of the population are cocaine users. Let's say out of every million people, one has used cocaine. If you take a random sample of 100 people, you aren't likely to pull that one person. So that means that likely all the positives in that group of 100 would be false positives, not true positive. On the other hand, let's say that out of every million people, 999,999 have used cocaine. That means that it is likely in your group of 100 people that most of your positives are true positives. That is the flaw answer choice (C) is describing.
Hope that helps!