You sit down with a well mixed deck containing A cards marked "+" and B cards marked "—". You may draw cards from this deck as long as you want, i.e., you can stop playing at any point. Each time you draw a + card you are given $1 and each time you draw a — card you have to pay $1. Cards are
not replaced after having been drawn.
What would be a fair amount to pay for the right to play (i.e., what is the expected payoff) and under what circumstance should a player cease drawing?
Remarks:
1. Gee, it's exciting to see the problem generate so much interest and good thinking!
2. I feel badly to have lost sight for so long, and even to have missed important requests for clarification. Maybe the site could have some facility for author notification. Perhaps a theme for the forums..
Substance:
1. There is more to this problem than met my eye! As has been pointed out, the proposed solution is at fault, and will have to be corrected.
2. I would much prefer to replace it with a closed form solution. Dej Mar (comment 27) may have pointed out a way. I'll need to research this, or perhaps someone may get there before me. I would only be willing to accept a spreadsheet solution of last resort.
3. I continue to have confidence in the published recursion relation. We can also believe that the published (and erroneous) formula fulfills the recursion relation condition. What I had overlooked was the possibility that the recursion relation could have multiple solutions. Presumably this is cause of the trouble.
|
Posted by FrankM
on 2008-03-24 17:06:48 |