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AR15.COM
10/15/2007 6:56:38 PM EDT
Suppose you're on a game show, and you're given the choice of three doors: Behind one door is a car; behind the others, goats. You pick a door, say No. 1, and the host, who knows what's behind the doors, opens another door, say No. 3, which has a goat. He then says to you, "Do you want to pick door No. 2?" Is it to your advantage to switch your choice?

10/15/2007 7:04:04 PM EDT
[#1]

Quoted:

Quoted:
You should change your choice to the other door. The odds are better.


Huh?  Door three has no bearing on doors one or two, right?  One still has goats and one a car.  The odds don't change.  

It's like having 1 cent on the board and 1 million on the board on Deal or No Deal.  One's in your case.  Switch?  The odds are 50/50 either way.

To increase the probability that you'll get the car, you should switch doors. This seems counter-intuitive to some, because it seems that no matter what Monty has revealed, you are left with two doors and no way to know which one has the car. The probability would seem to be 50% for either. It isn't.

Think of it this way: If you went through this routine 300 times, you would choose a door without the car about 200 of those times, right? (2 out of three doors have no car, so 200 out of 300 times - on average - you would choose a door without the car) Now, each of those times Monty will eliminated the other non-car door for you, meaning if you switch you will get the car, right?

Of course the other 100 times you will have chosen the right door from the start, and will lose the car when you switch. However, winning 200 out of 300 times is better than 50%, right? With a probability of 2/3, or 66.7%, you should always switch.

There are other ways in which people have explained this. To me, the interesting thing about the "let's make a deal," riddle, is that it is an example of the relevance of knowing how to figure probabilities. This is how the game show was really played, after all. I wonder what the statistics are on how many contestants switched or stayed with their first choice?
10/15/2007 7:06:02 PM EDT
[#2]
IMO it depends on whether the host deliberatly selected a goat or just picked a door that happened to have a goat.  If it was random, your odds are 50/50.  If he selected a goat on purpose the odds favor switching.
10/15/2007 7:07:30 PM EDT
[#3]

Quoted:

Quoted:
You should change your choice to the other door. The odds are better.


Huh?  Door three has no bearing on doors one or two, right?  One still has goats and one a car.  The odds don't change.  

It's like having 1 cent on the board and 1 million on the board on Deal or No Deal.  One's in your case.  Switch?  The odds are 50/50 either way.



montyhallproblem.com/
10/15/2007 7:07:48 PM EDT
[#4]

Quoted:

Quoted:
You should change your choice to the other door. The odds are better.


Huh?  Door three has no bearing on doors one or two, right?  One still has goats and one a car.  The odds don't change.  

It's like having 1 cent on the board and 1 million on the board on Deal or No Deal.  One's in your case.  Switch?  The odds are 50/50 either way.


Please tell me you're not an engineer designing airplanes.

If you are, at least tell me which one you work for so I can avoid it

At the start of the game the odds of you correctly picking the right door were 33% (house had 66% chance of being right since they get two doors).

So now the host has effectively eliminated one of the doors from the 66% pool.

Which pile would you rather choose from? The pile that formerly had 2 choices or your single choice?

Think of it with a pile of 100 boxes where you initially get to pick only one. Then the host eliminates 98 other 'empty' boxes from the pile of 99. Which pile would you rather pick from now?

What airline was that again.....
10/15/2007 7:09:35 PM EDT
[#5]
This maybe another conveyer belt thread.

I still believe once one of the doors is revealed, there are only 2 possible choices therefore the ONLY odds are 50/50.

So over time changing you door won't matter.
10/15/2007 7:12:39 PM EDT
[#6]

Quoted:
IMO it depends on whether the host deliberatly selected a goat or just picked a door that happened to have a goat.  If it was random, your odds are 50/50.  If he selected a goat on purpose the odds favor switching.


It doesn't matter, if he ALWAYS reveals what is behind one of the three doorsand gives you the chance to change, then your odds ALWAYS increase from 33% to 50% EVERYTIME.
10/15/2007 7:15:05 PM EDT
[#7]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
You should change your choice to the other door. The odds are better.


Huh?  Door three has no bearing on doors one or two, right?  One still has goats and one a car.  The odds don't change.  

It's like having 1 cent on the board and 1 million on the board on Deal or No Deal.  One's in your case.  Switch?  The odds are 50/50 either way.



montyhallproblem.com/


+1

As others have pointed out, you SHOULD switch.

This is a well-known game theory exercise, and the math is solid.  Switching does technically increase your odds.



PLEASE let's not turn this into another .9bar thread.  Why do people think that math has to be intuitive?  The human brain is a squishy biological bag of watery cells - things don't have to "feel right" to be right.  

10/15/2007 7:15:22 PM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:
It's like having 1 cent on the board and 1 million on the board on Deal or No Deal.  One's in your case.  Switch?  The odds are 50/50 either way.

To increase the probability that you'll get the car, you should switch doors. This seems counter-intuitive to some, because it seems that no matter what Monty has revealed, you are left with two doors and no way to know which one has the car. The probability would seem to be 50% for either. It isn't.

Think of it this way: If you went through this routine 300 times, you would choose a door without the car about 200 of those times, right? (2 out of three doors have no car, so 200 out of 300 times - on average - you would choose a door without the car) Now, each of those times Monty will eliminated the other non-car door for you, meaning if you switch you will get the car, right?

Of course the other 100 times you will have chosen the right door from the start, and will lose the car when you switch. However, winning 200 out of 300 times is better than 50%, right? With a probability of 2/3, or 66.7%, you should always switch.

There are other ways in which people have explained this. To me, the interesting thing about the "let's make a deal," riddle, is that it is an example of the relevance of knowing how to figure probabilities. This is how the game show was really played, after all. I wonder what the statistics are on how many contestants switched or stayed with their first choice?


I can only assume a 5th grader wrote that.  I'm no genius, but I've had roughly 4 years of college math (from Calculus, to differential equations, to linear algebra, to random processes and noise and other probability/statistics classes).  The above has no basis in fact.

If you choose a door, you do have a 1 in 3 chance of getting it righ.  Monty showing you that one of the others is bad doesn't increase or decrease the chances that your selected door is good or bad other than that it is now 1 in 2.  Either could have the car - same odds.

You have a bag with three balls - one red, one green, and one blue.  What is the probability of drawing a red ball?  1 in 3.  If you draw a green ball first, what is the probability of drawing a red ball then?  1 in 2.  Very basic probability/statistics material.

I could register a website with flawed math examples on it too, if I wanted to.  Not everything on the Internet is right.

I read that entire site, and I think he's really wrong.
10/15/2007 7:15:40 PM EDT
[#9]
say you want the goat? they make some good eating
10/15/2007 7:23:40 PM EDT
[#10]

Quoted:
I can only assume a 5th grader wrote that.  I'm no genius, but I've had roughly 4 years of college math (from Calculus, to differential equations, to linear algebra, to random processes and noise and other probability/statistics classes).  The above has no basis in fact.

If you choose a door, you do have a 1 in 3 chance of getting it righ.  Monty showing you that one of the others is bad doesn't increase or decrease the chances that your selected door is good or bad other than that it is now 1 in 2.  Either could have the car - same odds.

You have a bag with three balls - one red, one green, and one blue.  What is the probability of drawing a red ball?  1 in 3.  If you draw a green ball first, what is the probability of drawing a red ball then?  1 in 2.  Very basic probability/statistics material.
Maybe you should petition for a refund from your statistics class, then. Or at least the part about Venn diagrams and Bayesian analysis. Get out your old P&S text, and you will likely find this paradox as an example.
10/15/2007 7:25:35 PM EDT
[#11]
Getting in on page one of another airplane on a conveyor belt thread.

My answers:

1.  Switch doors
2.  The plane will take off
3.  0.9bar = 1 exactly - they are one and the same (no pun intended)
10/15/2007 7:26:46 PM EDT
[#12]

Quoted:
Maybe you should petition for a refund from your statistics class, then. Or at least the part about Venn diagrams and Bayesian analysis. Get out your old P&S text, and you will likely find this paradox as an example.


Did you read this part?

You have a bag with three balls - one red, one green, and one blue.  What is the probability of drawing a red ball?  1 in 3.  If you draw a green ball first, what is the probability of drawing a red ball then?  1 in 2.  Very basic probability/statistics material.


Is that example not valid as the same type of problem, or does the Monty guy knowing where the car is screw up the odds somehow that is not apparent?
10/15/2007 7:27:12 PM EDT
[#13]

Quoted:
Suppose you're on a game show, and you're given the choice of three doors: Behind one door is a car; behind the others, goats. You pick a door, say No. 1, and the host, who knows what's behind the doors, opens another door, say No. 3, which has a goat. He then says to you, "Do you want to pick door No. 2?" Is it to your advantage to switch your choice?



Is the goat on a treadmill?
10/15/2007 7:28:13 PM EDT
[#14]
Testing my new signature line.

ETA:  Fail = me (with regards to the signature line - I got the other three questions right)
10/15/2007 7:29:10 PM EDT
[#15]

Quoted:
Is the goat on a treadmill?


Yes, but it doesn't take off - no lift from its horns.
10/15/2007 7:29:57 PM EDT
[#16]
Again with the signature test (last time - if I don't get it right this time, then forget it)
10/15/2007 7:30:53 PM EDT
[#17]

Quoted:
I can only assume a 5th grader wrote that.  I'm no genius, but I've had roughly 4 years of college math (from Calculus, to differential equations, to linear algebra, to random processes and noise and other probability/statistics classes).  The above has no basis in fact.

Very basic probability/statistics material.


Well now that you've demonstrated your impressive mathematics and educational credentials, I also need to know which prestigious university awarded this degree

Because the question become obvious.....are YOU smarter than a 5th grader???



I'm yanking your chain a little here but you're dead wrong on this. I hope you're just kidding because it's very simple as I explained above.

In the absence of any other information you would be correct that the odds are even of picking the correct answer.

But you DO have additional information that improves your odds.

Take 1,000,000 boxes. One of them has a peanut in it.
You get to pick one and your buddy picks the other 999,999.
Who has the better odds of getting the peanut?

Your buddy (who knows which box contains the peanut) opens 999,998 boxes which are shown to be empty.

You are left with two boxes sitting side by side.

Would you change your choice now?



If you wouldn't then I'd like to invite you over to my place for some games of chance!
10/15/2007 7:32:02 PM EDT
[#18]

Quoted:

I can only assume a 5th grader wrote that.  I'm no genius, but I've had roughly 4 years of college math (from Calculus, to differential equations, to linear algebra, to random processes and noise and other probability/statistics classes).  The above has no basis in fact.

If you choose a door, you do have a 1 in 3 chance of getting it righ.  Monty showing you that one of the others is bad doesn't increase or decrease the chances that your selected door is good or bad other than that it is now 1 in 2.  Either could have the car - same odds.

You have a bag with three balls - one red, one green, and one blue.  What is the probability of drawing a red ball?  1 in 3.  If you draw a green ball first, what is the probability of drawing a red ball then?  1 in 2.  Very basic probability/statistics material.

I could register a website with flawed math examples on it too, if I wanted to.  Not everything on the Internet is right.

I read that entire site, and I think he's really wrong.


While we are all impressed with your credentials , the fact remains that this is a well-known and well-supported game theoretic problem.  The fact that you do not understand it doesn't make it wrong or stupid - it merely demonstrates that you didn't take any game theory classes.

If you want to brag about credentials, I once briefly spoke to Roger Myerson about this very problem.

10/15/2007 7:32:28 PM EDT
[#19]

Quoted:

<snip> or does the Monty guy knowing where the car is screw up the odds somehow that is not apparent?

Yes, that's the key.   Monty knows where the car is, and he is revealing some of that information by showing you a door without the car.
10/15/2007 7:32:57 PM EDT
[#20]
I would never purposefully post a wrong answer to illicit a response from others.  That would be wrong.

Pie are not square, by the way.  Pie are round.  
10/15/2007 7:35:09 PM EDT
[#21]

Quoted:
I would never purposefully post a wrong answer to illicit a response from others.  That would be wrong.


Agree. We wouldn't want any illicit responses around here...your dog might get shot!

10/15/2007 7:35:54 PM EDT
[#22]
We actually did this in one of my classes.

Totally counter-intuitive, but it DOES increase your odds.

Probability mathematics made makes my head hurt.
10/15/2007 7:36:27 PM EDT
[#23]

Quoted:
While we are all impressed with your credentials , the fact remains that this is a well-known and well-supported game theoretic problem.  The fact that you do not understand it doesn't make it wrong or stupid - it merely demonstrates that you didn't take any game theory classes.

If you want to brag about credentials, I once briefly spoke to Roger Myerson about this very problem.


Sweet.  I wasn't trying to drop any credentials like I was a genius.  I even said I wasn't one.    I'm into supercomputing, not gaming, so I have never seen this problem before.  I did cheat and do a Google search on it before posting, though, and I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night.  

I'd like to apologize right off for posting a wrong answer.  I knew it was wrong, but I still posted it because it felt right to fight the system and give similar examples to see if I could get a following.  I'm afraid I did the same thing at another gun board last year about the airplane on a conveyor belt, but I had great success there.  

BTW, I hope you like the Bushy M4gery you won in the raffle last year.  Haven't seen you since then (I got a job and got too busy to post).
10/15/2007 7:38:40 PM EDT
[#24]
Your poll left out "wearz teh X-ray gogglz"
10/15/2007 7:56:39 PM EDT
[#25]

Quoted:

Quoted:
While we are all impressed with your credentials , the fact remains that this is a well-known and well-supported game theoretic problem.  The fact that you do not understand it doesn't make it wrong or stupid - it merely demonstrates that you didn't take any game theory classes.

If you want to brag about credentials, I once briefly spoke to Roger Myerson about this very problem.


Sweet.  I wasn't trying to drop any credentials like I was a genius.  I even said I wasn't one.    I'm into supercomputing, not gaming, so I have never seen this problem before.  I did cheat and do a Google search on it before posting, though, and I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night.  

I'd like to apologize right off for posting a wrong answer.  I knew it was wrong, but I still posted it because it felt right to fight the system and give similar examples to see if I could get a following.  I'm afraid I did the same thing at another gun board last year about the airplane on a conveyor belt, but I had great success there.  


Phew - I'm relieved to see that post, because after I posted my (somewhat rude ) response, I thought to myself, "wait a minute - I know him, and that doesn't sound like him at all"

Glad to hear you were just (succesfully) yanking our chains.  



BTW, I hope you like the Bushy M4gery you won in the raffle last year.  Haven't seen you since then (I got a job and got too busy to post).


I know all about being busy - especially after just finishing and getting the first job at that level!  Those are stressful days, and I hope everything is going great for you!  

My life in the last year has been a rollercoaster, I don't mind telling you! Fortunately, things have settled down nicely now - but it's been a stressful year.

The M4 was a very pleasant surprise in the middle of all the stress, and it was put to very good use.  In fact, I used it to convert a new member into the ranks of the AR15 fanatics!
10/15/2007 8:02:12 PM EDT
[#26]

Quoted:

... In fact, I used it to convert a new member into the ranks of the AR15 fanatics!


10/15/2007 8:05:33 PM EDT
[#27]

Quoted:
I know all about being busy - especially after just finishing and getting the first job at that level!  Those are stressful days, and I hope everything is going great for you!  


Actually, I turned down the prof job I was offered because it was at a less-prestigious university, and I would have to move (the pay wasn't going to be super-duper).  I took an industry job at a wireless provider's corporate offices as a manager.    I have my eyes set on Executive VP over SW development/testing in 5 years or less, and I'm pretty close already.  In case that doesn't pan out, I'm keeping my CV out there to the other universities that are still hiring.  
10/15/2007 8:06:45 PM EDT
[#28]

Quoted:

Quoted:
I know all about being busy - especially after just finishing and getting the first job at that level!  Those are stressful days, and I hope everything is going great for you!  


Actually, I turned down the prof job I was offered because it was at a less-prestigious university, and I would have to move (the pay wasn't going to be super-duper).  I took an industry job at a wireless provider's corporate offices as a manager.    I have my eyes set on Executive VP over SW development/testing in 5 years or less, and I'm pretty close already.  In case that doesn't pan out, I'm keeping my CV out there to the other universities that are still hiring.  


That sure sounds a lot better than the crushing publish-or-perish grind of the research university!



10/15/2007 8:10:52 PM EDT
[#29]

Quoted:
That sure sounds a lot better than the crushing publish-or-perish grind of the research university!





Yep, I thought so.  My thesis research was all published in peer-reviewed journals piece by piece, so I was happy to cut it off right there and leave the future work to others in my group.

See you around - got to go to bed to get at corporate America in the early AM.    

I will have you know I was very envious of your M4 win, so I built one like the pic they posted during the raffle.  It's a DPMS, but it works great anyway.    I converted my father-in-law and brother with it and built two more - one for each - afterwards on their dimes using my tools.
10/16/2007 3:14:24 PM EDT
[#30]
Come on...more discussion and some flipping out please.
10/16/2007 3:25:29 PM EDT
[#31]
Just watch for Monty's "tells".

GM
10/16/2007 3:26:20 PM EDT
[#32]

Quoted:

Quoted:
IMO it depends on whether the host deliberatly selected a goat or just picked a door that happened to have a goat.  If it was random, your odds are 50/50.  If he selected a goat on purpose the odds favor switching.


It doesn't matter, if he ALWAYS reveals what is behind one of the three doorsand gives you the chance to change, then your odds ALWAYS increase from 33% to 50% EVERYTIME.


No.  If he deliberately selects a door with a goat (rather than selecting either of the two doors at random) your odds are better if you switch.  Because there was a 2 in 3 chance of the car having been behind one of the 2 doors you didn't pick the first time...eliminating a non-car door from those two means that one door you have the choice to switch to still has the 2 in 3 chance of having the car.  Versus sticking with your original 1 in 3 chance.

ETA:
If he just selects a door at random your odds would be 50/50 but a third of the time he would reveal the car when he opened a door.
10/16/2007 3:35:08 PM EDT
[#33]
"Instead of choosing, can I just take the two goats?  I've got a lot of weeds that need removal."  
10/16/2007 4:53:30 PM EDT
[#34]
This is one of those questions that seems to make people answer before they consider the problem.  When originally posted by Marilyn vos Savant (sp?) several prominent mathematicians made absolute fools of themselves.

I built an Excel spreadsheet to demonstrate the nuts and bolts of the problem to those more visually oriented.  

As a side note, Marilyn is one of those very bright people who also possess considerable wisdom.