1/2 ? It doesn't matter if he switches.
Yep. The knowledge of the observer is everything.Something that is interesting about the Monty Hall problem (assuming the host always reveals a goat, so the probabilities are 1/3 and 2/3):
If someone walks onto the set after the host has opened a door (so he doesn't know the player's original choice) and bets on the location of the car, it will be a 50-50 bet for him.
So each person will have a different probability for each door, yet BOTH sets of probabilities will be borne out by repeated trials.
Aren't all picks "not looking"? It is hard to pick randomly if you look.Are these all similar to the "not looking" pick from a bag full of marbles ?
No like the resulting marbles. If I don't look at put it back vs if i look then put it back.Aren't all picks "not looking"? It is hard to pick randomly if you look.
This was how I used to think of it (and still do mostly), but the problem with it is that I don't think it really explains the case where Monty picks the doors randomly and happens to show a goat.You can think of it as this way: If the player picks the door with the goat initially and switches, his chances of winning the goat is 100%. Since the probabilities of which of the two doors with the car behind it do NOT change and that the player does know which door the car is behind, the probability of winning the car is . If he doesn't switch his chances of winning the car is obviously .
OK well i got 55% is that right hahaha (assuming that not using a teleporter counts as 'using the teleporters')Fred lives on one of 10 islands sitting in a vast lake. One day a package drops uniformly at random on one of the ten islands. Fred can't swim and has no boat, but luckily there is a teleporter on each island. Each teleporter teleports to only one of the other ten teleporters (note that it may teleport to itself), and no two teleporters teleport to the same teleporter. If the configuration of the teleporters is chosen uniformly at random from all configurations that satisfy these constraints, compute the probability that Fred can get to the package using the teleporters.
Answer: 11/20
Yep that's the correct answer. I'm guessing the 0.1 is if it lands on the island he is on. Can you explain the second part?OK well i got 55% is that right hahaha (assuming that not using a teleporter counts as 'using the teleporters')
working: 0.1 + 0.9/(9*10) * (1 + 2 +...+9)
basically i counted permutations l0l
LOL 30 so they both get $30Two people play a game (call them A and B).
1. Numbers between 1 and 30 inclusive are written on balls and put in a bag.
2. Person A chooses a number, then person B chooses a number.
3. A ball is then drawn.
The closest person to the number drawn wins an amount equal to the number drawn in dollars. Eg. If A chooses 10, B chooses 20, and 16 is drawn, then B wins $16.
Suppose A and B both play optimally, what numbers do A and B choose?
Don't think they're allowed to choose the same number. (And the money the winner gets is the number drawn from the bag.)LOL 30 so they both get $30
Well if they play wouldn't one pick 1 and the other picks 30?Don't think they're allowed to choose the same number. (And the money the winner gets is the number drawn from the bag.)
No, doubt it.Well if they play wouldn't one pick 1 and the other picks 30?