han, on 2012-February-01, 06:53, said:
I think the main idea that you can take out of this is that (against optimal defenders) the discards of the opponents (for example the fact that LHO pitched two diamonds) are completely irrelevant, but the fact that LHO cannot have 4 hearts and the spade king is relevant. This makes it more likely that RHO has 4 hearts.
For Bluecalm the following argument might be convincing. There are these possibilities:
A) hearts split 3-2.
B) LHO has the king of spades and Jxxx of hearts.
C) LHO has the king of spades and RHO has Jxxx of hearts.
D) RHO has the king of spades and Jxxx of hearts.
E) RHO has the king of spades and LHO has Jxxx of hearts.
Scenarios A and B are irrelevant since you always make it in these cases.
In the remaining 3 scenarios RHO has Jxxx of hearts twice (C and D) and LHO has Jxxx of hearts once (E). Since C and E are exactly equally likely, we should play RHO for the heart length.
To make this argument correct we have to convince ourselves that the discards are really irrelevant. See my previous post for how you can do that, it takes some work but it is not hard.
At the risk of merely emphasizing my ignorance in these matters, I take what you are saying to be that we have 3 scenarios that we need to consider: C, D and E. Since C and E cancel each other out, the fact that the 'un-cancelled' D gives the Jxx to RHO means we play him for it.
But isn't D known, on the original post, not to be present? By the time we make the decision, RHO is reduced to 3 cards, and he didn't pitch the spade K, therefore he didn't have D.
How then, when comparing which of C and E existed (the only two scenarios remaining as possible) do we give any weight to D?
Isn't what we are doing simply trying to assess the a priori chances that LHO was dealt a hand that resulted in C compared to a hand that resulted in D?
And that entails figuring out whether 5=1=5=2 is more or less probable than 2=4=5=2 as of the time of the actual deal. Thus, before anyone looked at their cards, LHO was probably some 4432 and almost as likely to be some 4333 and very unlikely to be either 2=4=5=2 or 5=1=5=2, but we've eliminated all but the last two shapes from consideration, and the ratio of their probabilities remains unchanged, assuming uninformative discards.
I suspect something is wrong with this, since I have earlier suggested that RHO should throw the spade K when he has it in order to make it look as if D existed.
if we assume that he will sometimes throw the spade K when he holds no hearts, the fact that in the actual case he didn't, makes E less likely than C. If he always throws the spade K when he has it then at the point of decision, RHO would have pitched the spade K and thus D would be back into the equation. Conversely, if RHO always pitches the spade K when he has it, the lack of the pitch takes E out. A blended strategy appears to be indicated.
My head hurts.
(ducking now in anticipation of a hopely polite explanation of my undoubted error)
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari