Making high-stakes insurance decisions. The Journal of Economic Psychology (September 2008) published the results of a high-stakes
Question:
Making high-stakes insurance decisions. The Journal of Economic Psychology (September 2008) published the results of a high-stakes experiment in which subjects were asked how much they would pay for insuring a valuable painting. The painting was threatened by fire and theft, hence, the need for insurance. To make the risk realistic, the subjects were informed that if it rained on exactly 24 days in July, the painting was considered to be stolen; if it rained on exactly 23 days in August, the painting was considered to be destroyed by fire. Although the probability of these two events, “fire” and “theft,” was ambiguous for the subjects, the researchers estimated their probabilities of occurrence at .0001. Rain frequencies for the months of July and August were shown to follow a Poisson distribution with a mean of 10 days per month.
a. Find the probability that it will rain on exactly 24 days in July.
b. Find the probability that it will rain on exactly 23 days in August.
c. Are the probabilities, parts a and
b, good approximations to the probabilities of “fire” and “theft”? Applying the Concepts—Advanced
Step by Step Answer:
Statistics For Business And Economics
ISBN: 9781292413396
14th Global Edition
Authors: James McClave, P. Benson, Terry Sincich