The problem is that you do not know how well you will do in


Question: Should you drop your decision-analysis course? Suppose you faced the following problem: If you drop the course, the anticipated salary in your best job offer will depend on your current GPA:

Anticipated salary | Drop = ($4,000 x Current GPA) + $16,000

If you take the course, the anticipated salary in your best job offer will depend on both your current GPA and your overall score (on a scale of 0 to 100) in the course:

Anticipated salary | Do Not Drop = 0.6($4,000 x Current GPA) + 0.4($170 x Course Score) +$16,000

The problem is that you do not know how well you will do in the course. You can, however, assess a distribution for your score. Assuming that 90-100 is an A, 80-89 is a B, 70-79 a C, 60-69 a D, and 0-59 an F, assess a continuous probability distribution for your numerical score in the course. Use that distribution to decide whether or not to drop the course. Figure 8.21 shows your decision tree.

Request for Solution File

Ask an Expert for Answer!!
Engineering Mathematics: The problem is that you do not know how well you will do in
Reference No:- TGS02319549

Expected delivery within 24 Hours