Imagine that you’re on a television game show and the host presents you with three closed doors. Behind one of them, sits a sparkling, brand-new Lincoln Continental; behind the other two, are smelly old goats. The host implores you to pick a door, and you select door #1. Then, the host, who is well-aware of what’s going on behind the scenes, opens door #3, revealing one of the goats.This counterintuitive and often-debated problem is discussed in detail at Priceonomics.“Now,” he says, turning toward you, “do you want to keep door #1, or do you want to switch to door #2?”Statistically, which choice gets you the car: keeping your original door, or switching? If you, like most people, posit that your odds are 50-50, you’re wrong...
Home » mathematics » The Monty Hall Problem explained
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
The Monty Hall Problem explained
mariyam | 8:02 AM | mathematics
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
We'll begin with the photograph above (credit here , via BoingBoing 2006): "...the community of Beloit, Wisconsin came together on...
-
The Faulkner Glossary contains both local Mississippi dialect words and the "highfalutin" words of conventional English used by t...
-
YouTube link . Anders Lund Madsen is a professional comedian. These supplemental notes from the uploader/subtitler: The reason i didn'...
-
I learned from reading Collector's Weekly that there are people who collect chewing gum. In the U.S., there are about half a dozen ser...
-
This is likely to have some effect on food prices in the United States. Nearly the entire Golden State – 99.81 percent to be exact — is in t...
-
From the collections of the Musée "Bible et Terre Sainte" - This stone mask from the pre-ceramic neolithic period dates to 7000 ...
-
A tourist seeking to take pictures of Yellowstone National Park crashed a camera-equipped drone into its largest hot spring , possibly dama...
-
My curiosity started with the above image, from a bestiary quiz at Medievalists.net . The creature depicted is identified as a beaver, but ...
-
Herewith three selections from a gallery of iceberg photos at The Telegraph . Top photo credit to Steppes Travel. The beautifully-laminate...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2015
(214)
-
▼
March
(27)
- "Spem in alium" in memory of Terry Pratchett
- Hans Rosling clarifies world demographics
- Dance with your dog (Crufts, 2015)
- "A little inaccuracy sometimes saves a ton of expl...
- A concrete block filled with human teeth
- The Monty Hall Problem explained
- Burning 15 tons of elephant tusks
- Canine agility champion
- A woman sues herself...
- Icebergs
- Emma Thompson - tax protester
- "Southern Cross" (Crosby, Stills, Nash)
- Texas sportscaster speaks out about race relations
- Weaselpecker
- A shiny spot on the dwarf planet Ceres
- St. Bernards prefer spaghetti to salad
- The location of Jeopardy! daily doubles
- A Royal Flycatcher - before and after
- U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe tosses a snowball
- A global rainfall/snowfall map
- Perhaps he was thinking of a fistula
- Why you "stave off" a cold
- The reasons you have eyelashes
- High school spends $662,000 on sports upgrades
- 17th century wearable technology
- "Consider the prison-phone industry"
- The seacoast of Bolivia
-
▼
March
(27)
No comments:
Post a Comment