Whenever a hawk meets a dove, the dove is killed. Whenever two hawks meet, they fight to death, and both are killed. And if two doves meet, nothing bad happens.
There are H hawks and D doves, and you are either a hawk or a dove. Assuming that meetings are random, what are your chances of survival?
(In reply to
re: not much of a clue here by Matthijs)
New and more extended simulations yielded that the average number of surviving doves M is not exactly equal to (D/H):
Averaged over 500000 simulations:
H = 10 ; D = 200 ; D/H = 20 ; M = 18,,47
H = 20 ; D = 200 ; D/H = 10 ; M = 9,474
H = 50 ; D = 200 ; D/H = 4 ; M = 3,952
H = 100 ; D = 200 ; D/H = 2 ; M = 1,998
H = 200 ; D = 200 ; D/H = 1 ; M = 0,990
H = 200 ; D = 100 ; D/H = 0,5 ; M = 0,488
H = 200 ; D = 50 ; D/H = 0,25 ; M = 0,248
H = 200 ; D = 20 ; D/H = 0,10 ; M = 0,0988
It seems that M = D/(H+1) is the best fit for these results.
This should confirm Oskars solution of a probability (1/(H+1)) for surviving of a dove in case of an even number of hawks.
Maybe he was right after all.
Matthijs
ResultsH
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Posted by Matthijs
on 2004-09-17 11:15:47 |