jdonn, on Jun 17 2009, 07:40 PM, said:
Free, on Jun 16 2009, 02:58 PM, said:
- Opps get a lot more HCP (which usually results in more total points and money). I know I've done calculations in the past, and HCP NS vs HCP EW were about equal. However, if you switch sides now and then, your opps can get way more HCP than average.
Sorry but this comment shows a complete and utter lack of understanding about probability and statistics of any kind. It is equivalent to the following argument.
You and I will both pick a card from each of 100 different decks and whoever picks more aces wins. However, if sometimes you pick first and sometimes I pick first then you can get way more aces than I get, which is not fair.
Do you know what "random" means?
Re the use of statistics:
I don't want to get too off-topic, but I have become interested in reading the ideas of W. Edwards Deming whose aim was to improve the quality of manufactured products in Japan and the USA. My paraphrase of his central thesis is that it is not really relevant to just pick a random sample of manufactured products and test their quality.
What is needed is a sampling along a time line. There will always be variabilty in the manufactured product. This is completely unavoidable and needs to be recognized as such. It is due to 1001 interactions that are part of any process.
What is important is that both the long-run performance and natural variabilty are determined and then monitored continuously. If it is observed, for any series of continuous time points, that the performance is consistently above or below the long-term average, management needs to recognize that special factors are at work and adopt remedies to return the process to its long-term average.
What has this to do with bridge? Maybe it's relevant to Free's concerns, maybe not.
But the key tenet of Deming is out there: Don't always think in terms of a simple average, there is a time component to events that we ignore at our peril.
In my own case, I know I try to monitor my alertnes before I play on BBO. I sometimes do this by playing a couple of hands on Bridge Baron. I am testing whether my brain is too tired to think, or not, as tiredness is the special factor that most often prevents me from performing at my true level.
In summary, I am just trying to keep my mind open to Deming's ideas. They are credited with playing a key role in the miracle that is modern Japanese manufacturing. I think they must have relevance in other fields, such as bridge and education, my key areas of interest.