Say a new deadly disease sweeps the country. Let's call it Sudden Dumb Idiot Ailment, or SDIA for short. One of its symptoms are going to BrainDen.com and posting lots of "brain teasers" that people have posted months ago.
Luckily, right now, very few people have SDIA. Let's assume for the sake of argument that only 2% of the population has this disease (although looking at what's on reality television shows, you'd think it higher).
Suppose there's a test that checks to see if you have SDIA. Because the goal is to find people with SDIA (so they can't pass it on to other unsuspecting folks), the goal is to create a test with very few false negatives. One of the side effects of creating a test with very few false negatives is it creates false positives.
Say this test correctly identifies people who DO have SDIA 99.9% of the time. Say this test correctly identifies people who DO NOT have SDIA 98.5% of the time.
You are worried that you have SDIA (you got stumped on 3 "giterdone" riddles in a row), so you go in to take a test. The next day you get a phone call.... the test came back positive! Uh oh!
What are the chances that you actually do have SDIA???
By the way, the answer illustrates the situation with other types of disease testing.
Question
Guest
Say a new deadly disease sweeps the country. Let's call it Sudden Dumb Idiot Ailment, or SDIA for short. One of its symptoms are going to BrainDen.com and posting lots of "brain teasers" that people have posted months ago.
Luckily, right now, very few people have SDIA. Let's assume for the sake of argument that only 2% of the population has this disease (although looking at what's on reality television shows, you'd think it higher).
Suppose there's a test that checks to see if you have SDIA. Because the goal is to find people with SDIA (so they can't pass it on to other unsuspecting folks), the goal is to create a test with very few false negatives. One of the side effects of creating a test with very few false negatives is it creates false positives.
Say this test correctly identifies people who DO have SDIA 99.9% of the time. Say this test correctly identifies people who DO NOT have SDIA 98.5% of the time.
You are worried that you have SDIA (you got stumped on 3 "giterdone" riddles in a row), so you go in to take a test. The next day you get a phone call.... the test came back positive! Uh oh!
What are the chances that you actually do have SDIA???
By the way, the answer illustrates the situation with other types of disease testing.
Link to comment
Share on other sites
5 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.