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Am I the only one who thinks that everyone on Deal or No Deal are actors? It seems so fake and over-the-top dramatic to me.
Howie Mandel sucks, the concept of the show sucks... but the girls are hot.
What do you mean by this part? The probability of getting a remaining amount on the board does increase as you remove other amounts, right?
Maybe I'm misinterpreting?
Good explanation.I believe that Dryden supplied a decent explanation.
What I do to communicate what Dryden laid out, is bring in a deck of cards, without the jokers. Most know that probability of randomly selecting the ace of clubs on a single draw is 1/52. Now if I have you randomly select a card and say that I will give you $1,000,000 if you have selected the ace of clubs, do not let you look at your selected cards, and then I proceed to look at the cards and discard 50 of them, leaving your selected card and one other card, and tell you that one of the remaining two cards (the one you selected or the one I left out) is the ace of clubs and then give you the option of changing cards, would you change? You should since the probability that you selected the ace of clubs is still 1/52; many look at the scenario I laid out as there are only 2 cards left so your probability is 1/2. They forget that the probability of the event of selecting the ace of clubs from the full deck has a sample space of 52 hence the probability doesn't change.
Good explanation.
This is similar to the Monty Hall paradox where someone picks from three doors with prizes behind them, is shown what is behind one of the doors, and asked if they want to change to the third door or stay with their choice. If they stay, the odds of winning the big prize are 1/3; if they change, the odds are 1/2.
Comparison with the Monty Hall Problem
When only two cases remain, Deal or No Deal might appear to be a version of the Monty Hall problem. Consider a game with three cases (similar to the three doors in the Monty Hall problem). The player chooses one case. Then, the player chooses a case to expose. Finally, the player is given the option to trade his case for the one remaining. The Monty Hall problem gives the player a 2/3 chance of winning with a switch and a 1/3 chance of winning by keeping his case. However, statistical testing has shown that there is no advantage in switching in the Deal or No Deal situation. The player has a 50/50 chance of increasing his winnings by either switching or keeping his case.
The reason that the Monty Hall problem gives the player an advantage is because the host purposely exposes a losing door. In other words, there is no randomness to the door exposed. It is purely based on the player's first choice. In the Deal or No Deal situation, the player chooses one case and then exposes another. The one exposed may very well be the winning case, leaving two lesser cases still in play. Therefore, there is no relation between the player's first choice and the case that is exposed. That breaks the Monty Hall advantage in switching.
Good explanation.
This is similar to the Monty Hall paradox where someone picks from three doors with prizes behind them, is shown what is behind one of the doors, and asked if they want to change to the third door or stay with their choice. If they stay, the odds of winning the big prize are 1/3; if they change, the odds are 1/2.
What I'm wondering about in Deal or No Deal, is if the banker knows what dollar amounts are in which cases as he's making the offers. I've hardly watched the show, do they say whether or not the banker is aware of where the amounts are?
They've said before that nobody knows what's in the cases except for an independent firm... not the bank, Howie or the producers.
Comparison with the Monty Hall Problem
When only two cases remain, Deal or No Deal might appear to be a version of the Monty Hall problem. Consider a game with three cases (similar to the three doors in the Monty Hall problem). The player chooses one case. Then, the player chooses a case to expose. Finally, the player is given the option to trade his case for the one remaining. The Monty Hall problem gives the player a 2/3 chance of winning with a switch and a 1/3 chance of winning by keeping his case. However, statistical testing has shown that there is no advantage in switching in the Deal or No Deal situation. The player has a 50/50 chance of increasing his winnings by either switching or keeping his case.
The reason that the Monty Hall problem gives the player an advantage is because the host purposely exposes a losing door. In other words, there is no randomness to the door exposed. It is purely based on the player's first choice. In the Deal or No Deal situation, the player chooses one case and then exposes another. The one exposed may very well be the winning case, leaving two lesser cases still in play. Therefore, there is no relation between the player's first choice and the case that is exposed. That breaks the Monty Hall advantage in switching.
They've said before that nobody knows what's in the cases except for an independent firm... not the bank, Howie or the producers.
On bukiprof's deck of cards scenario, if he allowed a switch at the end, the odds would be 51/52 if you switched, and 1/52 if you didn't.