Ok, Rocket, imagine there are now 30 doors. 1 car, 29 goats.
You pick any door and your chance of winning the car is 1 in 30, right?
Now, the host opens 28 doors revealing goats, leaving only the door you picked and one other door closed.
Are you going to swap or stay with the door you chose? How confident are you that you picked the right door out of 30? Still think you've got a 50/50 chance of winning now? We're not talking about the fact that there are only two doors left, we're talking about the chances of you winning the car.
You have to remember that your first choice, you had a 1 in 30 chance of picking right. Which means, you also have a 29/30 chance of picking wrong!! The fact that there are only two doors left does NOT make it 50/50 since you chose a door with the initial odds of 1 in 30.
Same with the original problem, it's not about two doors left closed -- The fact remains that your first choice, you've got a 66% chance of being WRONG!! Not good odds if you want to win a car.
If you still not getting it, think of 1,000,000 doors. You pick a door and the host opens 999,998 all showing goats -- do you REALLY think your chances of winning are still 50/50?
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Yes of course they are. Two doors left to open, one choice. THAT is a 1 in 2 chance (or 50/50 chance) of winning. You have to stop taking the host into account. You have to forget about the open doors. Two are closed, there is a prize behind one, you have to pick one. THAT is 1 in 2.
Last edited by Rocket36; 14-03-2010 at 02:53 PM.
And you NEED to start taking the host into account. You can't just pick and chose what you want to include. The host makes all the difference, he's the one who stops it becoming a random choice -- This isn't a flip of the coin.
Your argument for a 50/50 outcome is only valid if the host randomly selects a door to open or if there isn't a host at all.
Sunroof // ICT Tint // Seats // Steering wheel
Correct!
The host is always going to pick a door with a goat. That's 1 in 1. But that happens after your 3 in 1 decision, and if you do nothing, your odds remain 3 in 1. The odds of picking the door with the car, IF you make the switch decision, now become 2 in 3!
Rocket, you are trying to rationalise the natural intuition we have for this game, but it is wrong. Hard to accept, but wrong. As I said, get a partner to lay out sets of 3 cards in front of you, and track the outcome. You will discover that switching gives you the highest outcome of "the car"
Last edited by Timbo; 14-03-2010 at 04:34 PM.
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Lies, damn lies and statistics, thats what's killing this, and lets not forget the original question. It was, if given the choice, should your switch your choice after they eliminate a goat?
So lets look at this backwards, in order to WIN the car you should pick a goat the first time (which is more likely at 2/3) then switch to the car after they eliminate one of the goats!
So you had a 2/3 chance of being wrong the first time which in turn means that in 2/3 cases you would be better off switching the second time around. So YES, you are statistically better off switching.
Again, you were MORE LIKELY to be wrong the first time which means your *statistically* MORE LIKELY to win if you switch the second time (even though the choice in isolation is still 50/50).
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The choice in isolation is 1 in 2, but the choice is not in isolation.
The initial choice is made when there are 3 doors and no knowledge as to what lies behind them. At that point, the odds are 2 in 3 for a goat, but 1 in 3 for a car.
After you've chosen your door, the host opens a door, and reveals a goat (this is critical to the game: the host always opens a door that reveals a goat). Now, it seems "so obvious" that the odds have just shifted in your favour, that your choice of door has a 1 in 2 chance of being the car (or the other goat). But that's just your brain playing tricks on you, rationalising something that seems oh sooo intuitive. But it's wrong. The probability that your original chosen door hides a goat is still 2 in 3, because the fact that the host opens a door revealing a goat (which he'll always do) does not alter the original probability associated with your choice when there were three closed doors.
So you need to counter the rationalisation of your natural intuition with the following thought pattern: "when I picked that door, there was a 2 in 3 chance it would be a goat; one door has been opened, revealing a goat, but there's still a 2 in 3 chance that the door I originally chose hides a goat, therefore I should switch to the other door, which has now has a 2 in 3 probability of being the car.
This thinking process lies at the heart of what is known as Bayesian probability theory, which are central to some fairly significant decision support systems. For example, in the context of this forum, I'm pretty sure VAG logs all warranty claims worldwide into a system that tests the likelihood that the claim is genuine or not, based on a Bayesian neywork. So next time your dealer service manager says that he's never heard of your model car having that problem, chances are he's blowing smoke to push you off (!), but if he has access to, and has actually consulted the VAG warranty system, he may be correct...statistically![]()
Last edited by Timbo; 14-03-2010 at 06:14 PM.
2015 White German SUV
2013 White German hatch
2011 Silver French hot hatch
2008 TR Golf GT TDI DSG
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