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Actuary Anyone?


Guest ThePhilosopher

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Guest ThePhilosopher
Posted

I am studying for exam P and I'm on problem 39 of 149 in a free packet I received, but I'm worried that simply solving problems isn't going to be enough. If anyone has sat for or us studying for exam P I'd like to hear your study recommendations.

Guest ThePhilosopher
Posted

Maybe something more concrete, anyone?

Problem.jpg

I'm stuck on setting up the integral here from here - I'm not utterly familiar with this type of problem.

Guest ThePhilosopher
Posted (edited)

No worries, I figured it out (had to look up a thing or two):

Problem_Solved.jpg

Edited by ThePhilosopher
Guest ThePhilosopher
Posted

I'm stuck with this summation - I'm not allowed to use a graphing calculator at all.

Problem2.jpg

Posted

Good grief, I used to be able to do that stuff.

Hence why those actuary boys get paid the big bucks.

Good luck with that lot. Be keen to hear how you go.

Posted

I forwarded to my bother in law and this is his reply.

"I am pretty sure I solved it. The answer is D.

first find the distribution of X.

X = {

0 if x < 0

1-e^(-2/3) if x = 2

1/3 * e^(-x/3) if x > 2

Then just compute E(x).

E(x)=

integrate(x*0,x,-infinity,2) + 2*(1-e^(-2/3))

+ integrate(x/3 * e^(-x/3),x,2,infinity)

which equals 2+3e^(-2/3)

I got "1-e^(-2/3)" by using the CDF of T solved at x=2. This will give me the probability that the device failed during the first two years.

let me know if I got the right answer. It was fun working on it."

What do you think? Did he get it right?

Guest ThePhilosopher
Posted

I forwarded to my bother in law and this is his reply.

"I am pretty sure I solved it. The answer is D.

first find the distribution of X.

X = {

0 if x < 0

1-e^(-2/3) if x = 2

1/3 * e^(-x/3) if x > 2

Then just compute E(x).

E(x)=

integrate(x*0,x,-infinity,2) + 2*(1-e^(-2/3))

+ integrate(x/3 * e^(-x/3),x,2,infinity)

which equals 2+3e^(-2/3)

I got "1-e^(-2/3)" by using the CDF of T solved at x=2. This will give me the probability that the device failed during the first two years.

let me know if I got the right answer. It was fun working on it."

What do you think? Did he get it right?

No - nowhere is the Poisson distribution nor the payment. You cannot integrate because the Poisson distribution is discrete and line segments have 0 area. I've got it figured out finally though.

Posted

Surely if you're going to exponentially distribute with a mean of three years you're going to need a gen? A rep wouldn't last that long under normal conditions. I suggest you try a gen forum :D :D :D

Posted

WOW, I think that just destroyed my JAWS software!! lol.

Cougaree and his brother were right on their answer, the answer was for the first problem not the second.

Sixx :bones:

Guest ThePhilosopher
Posted

I see that now Sixx, I was confused as I had answered the first already - I feel doltish.

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