The common "Monty Hall" problem (where the MC helps out the
contestant) is not random! See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Hall_problem
My edits were removed as I had no references. :-(
Maybe you can verify my statements, included below. :-)
Another analysis considers three types of hosts and three prize levels. The
Benevolent Host always shows the worst remaining prize after you choose, the
Random Host randomly picks a remaining door to show, and the Malevolent Host
always shows the best remaining prize. The prizes are bad, middle, best; e.g.
Goat, Luggage, Car. The Player is unaware of which prize is which. He may expect
to be choosing among Pigs, Goats, Blenders, Luggage, Cars, and Houses.
If you always switch, the results for each host are:
Results after switching, expanded behaviors
Host V /Prize -> Bad Middle Good
Benevolent Host 0% 33% 67%
Random Host 33% 33% 33%
Malevolent Host 67% 33% 0%
If each host were equally likely, the total probability for each prize would be
33%-the same as not switching. Without knowing the type of Host and the prize
mix, you can make no meaningful statement about the success of a switching
strategy.
The only way for a Player to "improve the odds" is if he or she can
get some meaningful information from the prize shown. I.e., if you know what the
three prizes are and what type of Host you have, then you can develop a winning
strategy. If you were wrong about either the Host or the prize mix, that
strategy may be harmful.
Robert Farley
Metro
www.Metro.net
-----Original Message-----
From: r-help-bounces at r-project.org [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org]
On Behalf Of Johannes Huesing
Sent: Sunday, May 11, 2008 01:26
To: r-help at r-project.org
Subject: Re: [R] Monty Hall simulation
cirrus74 <cirrus74 at hotmail.com> [Sun, May 11, 2008 at 03:44:46AM
CEST]:>
> Is it possible to simulate the Monty Hall problem using R? If so, could
> someone please show me how? Thanks for any help rendered.
The kind of simulation, as any thinking about this seeingly paradoxical
situation, depends on your mindset.
To my mind,
niter <- 999
prize <- sample(c("car", "car", "goat"), niter,
replace=TRUE)
would be a perfect simulation.
--
Johannes H?sing There is something fascinating about science.
One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture
mailto:johannes at huesing.name from such a trifling investment of fact.
http://derwisch.wikidot.com (Mark Twain, "Life on the
Mississippi")
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