well known proba problem
- drmwc
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Re: well known proba problem
An interesting variant is the Sleeping Beauty Problem.
On Sunday, Sleeping Beauty is given a drug to make her sleep. Immediately after she falls asleep, a fair coin is tossed.
1) If it is heads, she is woken on Monday. She is interviewed on Monday. and the experiment ends.
2) If it tails, she is also woken on Monday and interviewed. However, she is then put back to sleep and given an amnesia-inducing drug which causes her to forget the previou interview. She is woken on Tuesday and interviewed again. Then the experiment ends.
At each interview, she is asked "What is your credence to the propoosition that the coin landed heads?"
The problem is to determine the best answer. This is suprisingly non-trivial.
On Sunday, Sleeping Beauty is given a drug to make her sleep. Immediately after she falls asleep, a fair coin is tossed.
1) If it is heads, she is woken on Monday. She is interviewed on Monday. and the experiment ends.
2) If it tails, she is also woken on Monday and interviewed. However, she is then put back to sleep and given an amnesia-inducing drug which causes her to forget the previou interview. She is woken on Tuesday and interviewed again. Then the experiment ends.
At each interview, she is asked "What is your credence to the propoosition that the coin landed heads?"
The problem is to determine the best answer. This is suprisingly non-trivial.
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speedchase
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Bill Spight
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Re: well known proba problem
Suppose that, instead of an interview, she is offered an even money bet for 100 yen where she bets on heads. On Monday she breaks even, on Tuesday she loses. So she should not take the bet.drmwc wrote:An interesting variant is the Sleeping Beauty Problem.
On Sunday, Sleeping Beauty is given a drug to make her sleep. Immediately after she falls asleep, a fair coin is tossed.
1) If it is heads, she is woken on Monday. She is interviewed on Monday. and the experiment ends.
2) If it tails, she is also woken on Monday and interviewed. However, she is then put back to sleep and given an amnesia-inducing drug which causes her to forget the previou interview. She is woken on Tuesday and interviewed again. Then the experiment ends.
At each interview, she is asked "What is your credence to the propoosition that the coin landed heads?"
The problem is to determine the best answer. This is suprisingly non-trivial.
But if she is offered 2:1 odds, the bet is fair. If the coin came up heads, she wins 200 yen on Monday. If the coin came up tails, she loses 100 yen on Monday and 100 yen on Tuesday.
I do not see a frequentist vs. Bayesian conflict here. The Bayesian question for Sleeping Beauty is what are the odds that I am being interviewed (offered a bet) given the result of the coin toss.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
- perceval
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Re: well known proba problem
what kind of psycho prince would do that to sleeping beauty instead of kissing her ?
answer: geeky prince of course
answer: geeky prince of course
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.
- drmwc
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Re: well known proba problem
speedchase wrote:
Gambling odds are not the same as probability. The two are related, but they are not identical. Suppose a fair coin is tossed, and you bet on the coin being heads. If it is heads, you bet once. However, if it is tails you are required to bet the same amount twice. What odds should you accept, and what is the probability of the coin being heads?Bill Spight wrote: Suppose that, instead of an interview, she is offered an even money bet for 100 yen where she bets on heads. On Monday she breaks even, on Tuesday she loses. So she should not take the bet.
But if she is offered 2:1 odds, the bet is fair. If the coin came up heads, she wins 200 yen on Monday. If the coin came up tails, she loses 100 yen on Monday and 100 yen on Tuesday.
I do not see a frequentist vs. Bayesian conflict here. The Bayesian question for Sleeping Beauty is what are the odds that I am being interviewed (offered a bet) given the result of the coin toss.
This is a similar set-up as in the Sleeping Beauty Problem. The fact the gambling odds differ from the probability reflec the number of bets going in.
jts wrote:@drwmc,
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Bill Spight
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Re: well known proba problem
The correct odds are 50:50. Half the time I win X, one quarter of the time I break even, and one quarter of the time I lose 2X. X/2 - 2X/4 = 0.drmwc wrote:speedchase wrote:Gambling odds are not the same as probability. The two are related, but they are not identical. Suppose a fair coin is tossed, and you bet on the coin being heads. If it is heads, you bet once. However, if it is tails you are required to bet the same amount twice. What odds should you accept, and what is the probability of the coin being heads?Bill Spight wrote: Suppose that, instead of an interview, she is offered an even money bet for 100 yen where she bets on heads. On Monday she breaks even, on Tuesday she loses. So she should not take the bet.
But if she is offered 2:1 odds, the bet is fair. If the coin came up heads, she wins 200 yen on Monday. If the coin came up tails, she loses 100 yen on Monday and 100 yen on Tuesday.
I do not see a frequentist vs. Bayesian conflict here. The Bayesian question for Sleeping Beauty is what are the odds that I am being interviewed (offered a bet) given the result of the coin toss.
This is a similar set-up as in the Sleeping Beauty Problem. The fact the gambling odds differ from the probability reflec the number of bets going in.
Odds aside, a key difference to the Sleeping Beauty Problem is what Sleeping Beauty knows. Her bets are not independent, and she knows that. That knowledge affects the probability, according to Bayes Theorem.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
- drmwc
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Re: well known proba problem
I may have phrased the alternative badly.
We bet on a fair coin. If it's tails, you win £1. I it's heads, I win £2 since you are forced to place the wager twice.
What odds do you require?
We bet on a fair coin. If it's tails, you win £1. I it's heads, I win £2 since you are forced to place the wager twice.
What odds do you require?
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Bill Spight
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Re: well known proba problem
The second bet is a sure loss for me, and we both know that. To ask what odds I require is ridiculous. You are forcing me to give 2:1 odds on a 50:50 bet. (Or you are forcing me to make a sure loss bet if the coin comes up tails. Either way you look at it, I am the one giving odds.)drmwc wrote:I may have phrased the alternative badly.
We bet on a fair coin. If it's tails, you win £1. I it's heads, I win £2 since you are forced to place the wager twice.
What odds do you require?
Edit: To be clear. I want 50:50 odds on the bet as a whole, instead of my laying 2:1. Or, if we are separating the bets, I want to bet 0 on the sure loss bet, with 50:50 odds on the coin toss bet.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
- EdLee
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BigBadBuu
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Re:
Yeah what the hell was that? English dude englishEdLee wrote:It does. Each of the 3 boxes matters. See Post #50.BigBadBuu wrote:I have a question about the first puzzle. Why have a box with two silver coins? It doesn't add anything right?
- EdLee
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That was no higher than 9th grade English, and between 4th and 9th grade math,BigBadBuu wrote:Yeah what the hell was that? English dude english
depending on which country's math education.
"increment" here meant "add 1 to"; "iterations" here meant "repetitions."
Let's label the 3 bowls:
A:
B:
C:
If we remove B, then the first bowl randomly picked has a 100% chance of it being ( either A or C ).
If we keep B, then the first bowl randomly picked has only a 2/3 chance of it being ( either A or C ).
So whether B is there or not affects the outcome of the first bowl picked, which also affects the outcome of the second stone.