To determine the percentage of people in the town who have neither brown hair nor brown eyes, we can use the principle of Inclusion-Exclusion. Let's solve the problem step by step:
- Let \(P(A)\) be the probability (or percentage) of people having brown hair, which is 40%. Thus, \(P(A) = 0.40\).
- Let \(P(B)\) be the probability (or percentage) of people having brown eyes, which is 30%. Thus, \(P(B) = 0.30\).
- Let \(P(A \cap B)\) be the probability (or percentage) of people having both brown hair and brown eyes, which is 12%. Thus, \(P(A \cap B) = 0.12\).
- Using the principle of Inclusion-Exclusion, the probability of people having either brown hair or brown eyes or both can be calculated as follows:
\(P(A \cup B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A \cap B)\)
Substituting the values, we have:
\(P(A \cup B) = 0.40 + 0.30 - 0.12 = 0.58\)
- This means 58% of the people have either brown hair, brown eyes, or both.
- Therefore, the percentage of people who have neither brown hair nor brown eyes is the complement of \(P(A \cup B)\):
\(1 - P(A \cup B) = 1 - 0.58 = 0.42\)
- Thus, 42% of the people in the town have neither brown hair nor brown eyes.
Hence, the correct answer is 0.42.