articulett
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Articulett: the odds can change when Monty opens a door, depending on what new information can be inferred from what is revealed behind the door. CurtC summed up the different possibilities here: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3906664&postcount=418
Marilyn vos Savant (who is known to be very smart indeed and an expert on this particular problem) also explained the difference between the version where Monty chooses a door at random and the original problem, where he knows where the car is. The odds really do change to 50/50 when Monty opens a door at random, happening to reveal a goat. In the original version, where Monty always reveals a goat because he knows where the car is, the chance of the prize being behind your chosen door stays at 1/3, (while that of it being behind the remaining door is 2/3.
You can read this in the Wikipedia article, but for convenience I'll quote vos Savant again here. The question is: is it in the contestant's interest to switch doors after the host has revealed the goat? The answer is: it depends on what information the host had when choosing the door. As Marilyn vos Savant puts it:
Yes... I agree... with the alternate scenarios instead of the basics (where the host always reveals the goat and gives you an option to switch) that whether it's better to switch or not IS altered. However, your odds of having picked the correct door the first time don't change... your information as to whether to switch or not is changed by alternating host scenarios... but your odds of having picked correctly on the first choice remain 1 in 3... in the random scenario the host has the odds of picking a goat 2/3 of the time... and if he does... then the remaining door has an equal chance of being the car as the one you have. But even still-- in this case if you played it again and again-- you'd still have only picked the correct door the first time in 1/3 of the cases... and in 1/3 of those cases Monty will reveal a car in his blind guess... whether he offers you a chance to switch or not changes the game.
But my claim is that no matter how you fix the game or what the host does... your odds of having chosen the correct car on the first choice is 1 in 3-- whether you are allowed to switch or not or whether he reveals a car or a goat blindly or on purpose or only offers you a chance to switch if you are wrong doesn't change the fact that your original choice has a 1 in 3 chance of being right. That doesn't change... what the host does or doesn't offer you and his motives for doing so certainly could change whether you switch or not-- but your odds of having chosen correctly on the first choice don't change.
Yes, if he only offers to switch when you are a winner (that would be in 1/3 of the cases), then you should never switch. If it's blind, then it's just as good to stay as switch if he reveals a goat-- if he reveals the car (1/3 of the time) and he lets you switch-- you switch 100% of the time. If what he offers a person is based on whether they have a car or a goat--then the offering will be different in 1/3 of the cases. But these are all side stories. None of these change the fact that you first choice has a 1/3 chance of having been correct. Whether it's correct or not may change what the host offers you and whether you should switch... but it doesn't change the fact that your first choice has a 1 in 3 chance of being correct. It's never more than that. You can increase your odds by switching. But the odds that you have chosen correctly the first time remain at 1 in 3.
I agree that it's not always best to switch given the alternating scenarios. However I still maintain that your original odds for having chosen right the first time are not more than 1 in 3. Claus contended that your odds of having chosen correctly changed. In fact, that's what this derail is about. That isn't the case. Your information regarding whether to switch or not IS altered by these differing scenarios. Having more information doesn't change the fact that your first choice has a 1 in 3 chance of being correct.
(And because of this, if given the opportunity to switch-- without knowing anything else-- the odds are better on average if you do switch... the whole "lesson" in this little scenario.)
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