Odds Philosophy Question
#1
Posted 2013-January-31, 15:24
The best way to explain the problem is to give a strained and vague example. Suppose a particular move gives a 48% chance on double or nothing stakes. You do not take that bet, right. But, what if you knew that a specific occurrence happened 10% of the time and always meant a loss. To get to 48% net, you would then have 10% complete losses but 90% winning something like 53% of the time.
This sounds stupid, but it seems like you in this scenario have a 90% chance of a 53% chance of success. This is still a net of a 48% chance of failure, but not exactly.
I mean, bidding has these strange odds scenarios. There might be, say, only a 10% chance that partner does not have the diamond Queen. If he has it, the contract is a 66% winner. If not, the contract is hopeless. Well, I could do all sorts of math to see what the total odds are, or I could decide that I have a 90% chance of a great contract.
If one grouping of bad luck chances can be identified, we might be able to disregard that on the theory that this is a "bad day scenario." You only see, say, 2 of these 10% death sentence scenarios per session. So, if I ignore them, I pay a penalty in the Monday-Tuesday game but have a real good shot at a good game for the Wednesday-Thursday event.
Am I making any sense here? If so, any comments?
-P.J. Painter.
#2
Posted 2013-January-31, 16:18
#3
Posted 2013-January-31, 17:23
#4
Posted 2013-January-31, 18:11
kenrexford, on 2013-January-31, 15:24, said:
I mean, bidding has these strange odds scenarios. There might be, say, only a 10% chance that partner does not have the diamond Queen. If he has it, the contract is a 66% winner. If not, the contract is hopeless. Well, I could do all sorts of math to see what the total odds are, or I could decide that I have a 90% chance of a great contract.
Am I making any sense here? If so, any comments?
I think bidding is almost always based on incomplete information. One never knows the exact odds. It is always X% + e(rror).
#5
Posted 2013-February-01, 00:18
If you oversimplify, and say "you have a 90% chance of being in a great contract"... well... you are oversimplifying. When you have a 90% chance of being in a 51% contract (at MPs), or a 51% chance of being in a great (66%) contract, your oversimplification will cost you. That's the way oversimplifications are; often they work, sometimes they lead you astray.
#7
Posted 2013-February-01, 02:56
#8
Posted 2013-February-01, 03:03
The only time that sort of argument makes sense is when the payoff (in MP or whatever) changes based on who has the ♦Q.
#9
Posted 2013-February-01, 05:41
#10
Posted 2013-February-01, 06:34
Cyberyeti, on 2013-February-01, 02:56, said:
Your logic is flawless, however there are 2 other factors that influence this kind of decisions, and alter it if you introduce them: When the other table is not in 4♠ the risk is not worth it, and also important and discussed at lenght in the past, if you are a pro, you can't let the client see you going down on a cold game.
#11
Posted 2013-February-01, 06:42
I made a simulation trying to disprove my father's casino betting system, just to find out that his betting system was beating casino when the casino advantage was below 50.2%, the betting system advantage got below 50.03% when I introduced table limits though.
#12
Posted 2013-February-01, 06:51
#13
Posted 2013-February-01, 06:59
Fluffy, on 2013-February-01, 06:34, said:
Yes I should have stated that this only applies where everybody is in 4♠. I think if you have a combined 26-27 with a 5-4 fit and an unopposed auction you can probably assume that in most rooms.
I hadn't considered the client issue. I wrote a humorous piece in our local bridge mag a few years ago on something related (where any idiot can take all the working finesses and make a contract with overtricks, but the pro secured his contract against all but the one very unlikely situation that actually occurred), and yes I imagine the client doesn't take this well, particularly if they're not very good.
#14
Posted 2013-February-01, 07:45
kenrexford, on 2013-January-31, 15:24, said:
The best way to explain the problem is to give a strained and vague example. Suppose a particular move gives a 48% chance on double or nothing stakes. You do not take that bet, right. But, what if you knew that a specific occurrence happened 10% of the time and always meant a loss. To get to 48% net, you would then have 10% complete losses but 90% winning something like 53% of the time.
This sounds stupid, but it seems like you in this scenario have a 90% chance of a 53% chance of success. This is still a net of a 48% chance of failure, but not exactly.
(.1 * 0) + (.9 * .53333...) = .48
(.2 * .3) + (.8 * .525) = .48
Given the scenario that you describe, it seems silly to worry about the left hand side of the equation as opposed to the right.
#15
Posted 2013-February-01, 08:31
kenrexford, on 2013-January-31, 15:24, said:
Others seem to be getting more out of this than I am. If I were somehow convinced that the probability of partner having the diamond Q was 0.9 and the probability of the contract making, if he has it, is 0.66 (and 0 if he does not hold it) then I would figure the probability of the contract making is 0.9 times 0.66, which is just under 0.60.
One may or may not like the math, but it seems like that is all that in involved.
I simply am not seeing what else you are getting at.
Possibly I am just repeating what brothgar just said, only with mild rephrasing.
#16
Posted 2013-February-01, 08:48
#17
Posted 2013-February-01, 09:21
I suppose in most context it is clear what is meant but if someone refers to "odds=1/3" then I really want to know if it means odds=1/3, i.e. a probability split of 25%/75%, or if it means a probability of 33.3%.
#18
Posted 2013-February-01, 09:48
#19
Posted 2013-February-01, 11:39
helene_t, on 2013-February-01, 09:21, said:
The 25%/75% split is more properly expressed as 1:3, not 1/3, to avoid ambiguity. Verbally, these should be said "1 to 3" and "1 out of 3" (or "1 in 3"), respectively.
#20
Posted 2013-February-01, 12:29
Fluffy, on 2013-February-01, 06:34, said:
I think this applies just as well to amateurs/team-mates as to pro/client. How will team-mates react when you come back with a negative score - will they go through the maths and agree with you? Mine wouldn't.