T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1947.1 | a variation of the much discussed Monty Hall problem | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 24 1995 12:34 | 46 |
| nuisance answer 1: if x is odd, choose the other box, relying on the universal
law of mathematics that n is an integer.
nuisance answer 2: by induction, you can reach an unbounded payoff: choose the
left box, then, without opening it, choose the right box. Repeat.
nuisance answer 3: like the Monty Hall problem, this really depends on the
behavior, motivation and/or decision rules of the host.
Ignoring the nuisance answers above, I think the usual decision theory applies:
Put your hand on one box. The world is now in one of two states:
SAME = your hand is on the box that has the 2N
DIFF = your hand is on the box that has the N
Absent cheating, you have no reason to assume the probabilities of these two
states are different, so you can assign them both P=1/2.
You open the box and the host offers you the chance to change. Ignoring 3
above, neither action changes the probabilities, still both P=1/2.
Now you have a choice of two strategies:
KEEP = keep the money in the box you have opened
CHANGE = take the money in the other box
If we construct the usual decision payoff table:
Strategy State of World Expected Value of Strategy
SAME DIFF
Probability 1/2 1/2
KEEP 2N N 3N/2
CHANGE N 2N 3N/2
we see that the payoff of the two strategies is the same, matching the intuitive
answer.
In .0, we confuse ourselves by thinking in terms of X, which is 2N in one state
of the world and N in the other state. We get a strange answer when we add up
these different X values.
|
1947.2 | Not Monty Haul | SUBURB::STRANGEWAYS | Andy Strangeways@REO DTN 830-3216 | Tue Feb 28 1995 05:45 | 51 |
| Re: <<< Note 1947.1 by CSSE::NEILSEN "Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt" >>>
Wally,
An interesting answer, and essentially correct, but it does little to
explain the paradox to anyone who might be confused.
> -< a variation of the much discussed Monty Hall problem >-
No it isn't, or at least, I don't see it that way. Read on ...
Nuisance answer 1 (change if odd): This is a real answer, not a nuisance
answer. It's a perfectly valid observation. So sometimes you *do* gain
by swapping.
Nuisance answer 2 (infinite payoff by swapping): Maybe you could, but
that's not relevant. That's not the offer that's been made. You can
only swap once.
Nuisance answer 3 (depends on host's behaviour): Well, it depends on
the probability distribution of N, but not on any other aspect of
behaviour or psychology.
Now to the main arugument:
Absent cheating, you have no reason to assume the probabilities of these two
states are different, so you can assign them both P=1/2.
True.
You open the box and the host offers you the chance to change. Ignoring 3
above, neither action changes the probabilities, still both P=1/2.
False. See nuisance answer 1. Also, there's no need to worry about 3
above. You know you always get a chance to change, it's specified in
advance. Assume you know the prior distribution for N. You can still
set up the apparent paradox by an appropriate choice.
In .0, we confuse ourselves by thinking in terms of X, which is 2N in one state
of the world and N in the other state. We get a strange answer when we add up
these different X values.
True. The N analysis is correct. But X is a perfectly valid random
variable. You could set up the experiment and observe it empirically. It
may be harder to describe things clearly in terms of X, but it can be
done. The only excuse for strange answers is muddled thinking!
Can you give a correct analysis based on the known prior distribution
of N, and the observed value of X?
Andy.
|
1947.4 | pointer to solution | HERON::BUCHANAN | Et tout sera bien et | Tue Feb 28 1995 07:09 | 14 |
| Andy,
> Can you give a correct analysis based on the known prior distribution
> of N, and the observed value of X?
Try 1591.3.
Example 1 corresponds to "nuisance answer 1", and I agree with you
that it is a real issue, not "nuisance". Moreover, it can be extended. If the
game show hosts never set N odd (to avoid people switching when they pick X
odd), then we always switch boxes when X = 2 mod 4. And so on. It's reminiscent
of the paradox of the prisoner's execution date.
Andrew.
|
1947.5 | added information | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Mar 02 1995 12:21 | 15 |
| >Also, there's no need to worry about 3
> above. You know you always get a chance to change, it's specified in
> advance.
As written in .0, I don't know in advance whether I will get zero, one or many
chances to change.
If I know in advance, that would change my thinking.
> Assume you know the prior distribution for N. You can still
As written in .0, I don't know the prior distribution of N.
If I know it, then that changes my thinking, and the analysis in 1591.3 looks
correct to me.
|
1947.6 | Darn in the ends | SUBURB::STRANGEWAYS | Andy Strangeways@REO DTN 830-3216 | Tue Mar 07 1995 07:02 | 47 |
| Re .-2: Thanks, Andrew. I see that 1591 covers the same problem.
There are still a couple of loose ends.
It is possible to construct prior distributions which lead to a strategy
of "always change". For instance, let p(i) be the probablility the the
smaller of the two sums of money is i.
For i odd, define p(i) = (1/2^i)/4.
For i even, write i as 2^x * y, with y odd and x maximal, and
define p(i) = (3/4)^x * p(y).
This gives a valid probability distribution, with the property that
2*p(i/2) < p(2i) for all i. With this distribution you really do
increase your expected gain by changing. However, as pointed out in
1591, your expected payoff with this distribution is infinite.
In fact, it is impossible to construct a distribution with finite
expectation that gives the "always change" property.
Excercise 1: Prove this.
It is of course possible to construct finite distributions with the
"sometimes change" property.
As the game show host I would like to construct a distribution wich
minimises my expected payout. "Always choose 1 and 2" looks like a good
bet, with a certain loss of 2 against an intellegent contestant.
Exercise 2: Can I do better than this?
Re .-1:
>As written in .0, I don't know in advance whether I will get zero, one or many
>chances to change.
I still can't see the ambiguity. Ah well, the English language is a
slippery beast.
>As written in .0, I don't know the prior distribution of N.
True. I was just pointing out that the problem is one of mathematics,
(how does the prior distribution influence the strategy?) rather than
of psychology as you seemed to be implying.
Andy.
|
1947.7 | Right time, right place, wrong topic | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Fri Mar 31 1995 15:22 | 1 |
| PMJI, I was born in 1947.7 -- what a coincidence!
|
1947.8 | Fnord | SUBURB::STRANGEWAYS | Andy Strangeways@REO DTN 830-3216 | Mon Apr 03 1995 07:46 | 15 |
| Yup, an amazing coincidence. You see, the author of the base note of
this string was also the author of the original birthday note. Gotta be
the work of an alien intelligence ...
Does anyone remember those "Dr. Matrix" articles that Martin Gardner
used to do in Scientific American, debunking numerology? I can remember
a fine one in which he predicted Humphrey would beat Nixon to the
Whitehouse on the grounds of the large number of symmetries of his
inititals HHH, which also transliterate to 666, the number of the
beast.
Hmmm. I'd better post some proofs here since there don't seem to be any
takers.
Andy.
|