Concept explainers
The following table is a life table, reproduced from the chapter introduction. With an understanding of some basic concepts of
United States Life Table, Total Population
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
The column labeled ‘‘Proportion Surviving’’ gives the proportion of people alive at the beginning of an age interval who will still be alive at the end of the age interval. For example, among those currently age 20, the proportion who will still be alive at age 30 is 0.99050, or 99.050%. We will begin by computing the probability that a person lives to any of the ages 10, 20,…, 100.
The first number in the column is the probability that a person lives to age 10. So
The key to using the life table is to realize that the rest of the numbers in the ‘‘Proportion Surviving’’ column are conditional probabilities. They are probabilities that a person is alive at the end of the age interval, given that they were alive at the beginning of the age interval. For example, the row labeled ‘‘20–30’’ contains the conditional probability that someone alive at age 20 will be alive at age 30:
In Exercises compute the probability that a person lives to a given age.
1. From the table, find the conditional probability P(Alive at age 20 | Alive at age 10).
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