Batman Jr.
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2004
- Messages
- 1,254
I'm glad I can help! 
BillHoyt said:Right conclusion, but dead wrong analysis, Humphreys.
BillHoyt said:First off is the evidence from the game show, which I have to guess you've never seen.
BillHoyt said:Monty always revealed a goat door. Why? Because there is no drama in doing otherwise. There's nothing left to choose. The contestant knows she's lost. By revealing a goat door, the drama is increased, and the contestant still has a chance and a seemingly difficult choice to make.
BillHoyt said:Now for the analysis:
(Assume your explanation is right...)
o There is only one correct door.
o The contestant chooses one to start the game. 1/3 probability she is right.
o The chance one of the other doors is correct is 2/3.
o Monty chooses one of these at random.
o The chance he chose the prize is 1/3, but the game is now over, isn't it?
o The chance he didn't choose the prize is also 1/3, but, given that, the chance you should switch to the other door is 1/2.
o No advantage in switching!
BillHoyt said:(Assume now that Monty knows...)
o There is only one correct door.
o The contestant chooses one to start the game. 1/3 probability she is right.
o The chance one of the other doors is correct is 2/3.
o Monty selects (with knowledge) a goat.
o That selection, being done with certainty, is not part of the probability picture. Effectively, the 2/.3 probability has now jumped to the door the contestant did not originally choose.
o Switch, d***it, switch!
Im sure some of you have come across this before..but i was fascinated by the debate surrounding this.
Somehow, both sides of the discussion seem to make sense....
Heres the question.
You've got three doors..
Behind two of them is a goat, the other a car
You choose one door to open....but you dont open it yet.
Then, someone opens one of the other doors to reveal a goat.
You are left with two closed doors
But before you open your chosen door, you are given the choice to switch to the other unopened door and open that one instead.
Do you stay with your original choice of door or do you switch
Would switching from your original choice increase the odds of you finding the car...
( i know this is probably old maths problem...but it done my head in..)
If you want the link to the simulation...ask..
DB
Originally posted by De_Bunk Heres the link to one of the better simulators...
You can let it run, at hi-speed, a defined number of times to see the odds...
http://www.grand-illusions.com/simulator/montysim.htm
DB
Originally posted by athon: What if I prefer the goat?
Athon
Walter Wayne said:The assumption is that the probability of him revealing a false door is independant of which door you chose. The way the puzzle is phrased, we don't know whether he does this everytime or if he intentionally tries to throw people off.
IIRC correctly, on the game show Monty always revealed one. So in that particular case, always switch choices.
Walt
athon said:What if I prefer the goat?
Athon
Badger said:
Then it's a win-win situation. Imagine how many goats you could get for a car!
If you don't have that information, then overall it's still best to switch. If he isn't deliberately avoiding revealing the car, then you still sit on the 50/50 odds, so it's not going to make your chances any worse.Number Six said:But if you don't know that he's going to ask and then he asks, you can't say whether it's best to switch or not because you don't have enough information to come to a conclusion.
Rolfe said:My brain came out of my ears on this one some years ago. In the process I tried the following "reductio ad absurdum".
Matabiri said:
I came up with another reductio ad absurdum a while ago which I think works better:
Imagine you're playing 100 simultaneous games. You pick 100 doors. If you opened those doors now, you'd win, on average, 33 cars, right.
The host opens 100 doors which you didn't pick, revealing 100 goats. How would the act of opening those doors raise the number of cars you win from 33 to 50? It doesn't.