"Snake-Eyes" Joe introduced a die of his own into a game of chance.
He was subsequently challenged that the die was biased.
Very
rigorously test to see if there are grounds to substantiate this claim; don't accept just two or three trial runs. Are you able to offer a theoretical model consistent with your findings?
Test "Snake-Eyes" Joe's Die with this simulator which has a run of 60,000 at a time:
No: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Total |
Scores |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
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Note: the data changes with each subsequent mouse-over visitation to the link.
(In reply to
error in solution by Eigenray)
Your proposal aligns with the proposal put forward by Paul but I am struggling with the concept of "11".
I roll 9 1's and increment that total. On the 10th 1 the counter slot is overridden but the substitute value may be a 1.
In all fairness of discussion I copied 26* data tables from the problem's data generator to form the following tableau:
1 9273 10033 10240 10266 10092 10096 60000
2 9242 10229 10072 10048 10231 10178 60000
3 9158 10083 10274 10223 10161 10101 60000
4 9231 10137 10046 10217 10228 10141 60000
5 9344 10020 10187 9918 10271 10260 60000
6 9176 10063 10182 10183 10158 10238 60000
7 9061 10239 10126 10169 10256 10149 60000
8 9270 10208 10347 9934 10097 10144 60000
9 9322 10098 10338 10049 10189 10004 60000
10 9090 10333 10209 10154 10069 10145 60000
11 9167 10120 10148 9969 10352 10244 60000
12 9270 10090 10172 10169 10267 10032 60000
13 9317 10051 10203 10105 10181 10143 60000
14 9257 10135 10157 10045 10155 10251 60000
15 9257 10111 10147 10193 10009 10283 60000
16 9157 10116 10022 10256 10121 10328 60000
17 9172 10109 10245 10189 10115 10170 60000
18 9122 10096 10258 10096 10329 10099 60000
19 9200 10202 10226 10210 10032 10130 60000
20 9142 10319 10276 10175 10075 10013 60000
21 9271 10151 10127 10179 10079 10193 60000
22 9354 10204 10106 10062 10142 10132 60000
23 9131 10036 10169 10033 10363 10268 60000
24 9254 10354 10123 10079 10084 10106 60000
25 9260 10211 10023 10165 10223 10118 60000
26 9200 10073 10230 10178 10180 10139 60000
239698 263821 264653 263264 264459 264105
9219.1 10146.9 10178.9 10125.5 10171.5 10157.8 10156.2
In the last line of the tableau the average value for 1 falls short of that my suggestion of Paul's and the average value for the other 5 is marginally higher than that calculated value.
That I have a value 60 less than Paul for "1" and 13 for the other values may seem insignificant but placed as Paul suggests, any discrepancy could advantage a casino.
Convince me that there is a fallacy in dealing with the program source and I will ensure an adjustment to the listed solution.
* This was arbitrary, where I stopped on the spreadsheet.
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Posted by brianjn
on 2008-08-01 05:45:07 |