An unusual occurrence? Any statisticians out there?
#1
Posted 2013-November-05, 06:15
4441 hands (which I believe may be described as 4x1 on the other side of the Atlantic) are well known for being tricky to bid, but fortunately they aren't very common, with the result that in one or two systems I play they are more or less ignored and you are just expected to do the best you can. However, I played a 24-board match last night, and towards the end of the first half I realised that I was holding at least my 3rd 4441 hand of the evening. And there were two more in the second half. Hand records weren't available, and I can't remember for sure whether there had been any more in the first half before I started noticing their repeated appearance.
Anyway, assuming I "only" held five 4441 hands over the course of the 24 boards, I found myself wondering how unusual an occurence this was. According to my calculations, the chances of a given hand having a 4441 shape are just under 3%, so the expected number over the course of 24 boards is 0.72, but I wonder whether anyone can quickly work out the probability of at least 5 such hands. (I recall learning back in the dim and distant past - perhaps 35 years ago - about using a Normal approximation to a Binomial distribution, which might be one way of tackling this, but I've no real idea of how valid the approximation might be for these sort of numbers....)
#2
Posted 2013-November-05, 06:29
P (being dealt a 4441) = 2.993%
There are binomial calculators online, I used http://stattrek.com/...r/binomial.aspx
P (precisely five 4441s in 24 attempts) = 0.0573%
P (at least five 4441s in 24 attempts) = 0.0634%
#3
Posted 2013-November-05, 06:35
So assuming I play a 24-board session once a week then I should expect to get 5 or more 4441 hands in a session approximately every 30 years.....
#4
Posted 2013-November-05, 06:43
4x 5431
1x 5422
2x 4333
1x 6520
1x 4441
2x 5322
13x 4432
With 4 of the five 54xx hands being 11-15 HCPs with 4♠5♥ it was a good eveing for Flannery (except that on two of those four deals someone else opened in front of me).
But I think the probability of observing at least one perculiar feature of the statistics at any one evening is close to 1
#5
Posted 2013-November-05, 06:59
helene_t, on 2013-November-05, 06:43, said:
IMO, one part of understanding statistics is to realize that it is unexpected when everything is as expected.
Apart from being helpful in predicting what is expected to happen, statistics are also pretty good at predecting just how much unexpected will happen. Unfortunately, statistics can't tell what unexpected is expected to happen.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#6
Posted 2013-November-05, 07:34
helene_t, on 2013-November-05, 06:43, said:
4x 5431
1x 5422
2x 4333
1x 6520
1x 4441
2x 5322
13x 4432
With 4 of the five 54xx hands being 11-15 HCPs with 4♠5♥ it was a good eveing for Flannery (except that on two of those four deals someone else opened in front of me).
But I think the probability of observing at least one perculiar feature of the statistics at any one evening is close to 1
Quite. Perhaps Mike or someone else would be so kind as to calculate the probability of your holding that combination of shapes.
#7
Posted 2013-November-05, 07:54
-gwnn
#8
Posted 2013-November-05, 08:41
Vampyr, on 2013-November-05, 07:34, said:
As a first approximation, much less than 1 in 1000, since (a) those 7 shapes cover 74.7588% of all hands, so (b) the probability of 24 hands containing only those shapes (irrespective of individual shape frequency) = 0.747588^24 < 0.1%. To go into further detail would of course be very obsessive and boring ...
#9
Posted 2013-November-05, 09:22
Still, at least there were some fun hands in there. Thirteen 4432s in a night sounds like something that would cause one to fall asleep at the table.
ahydra
#10
Posted 2013-November-05, 09:23
The other mathematician says: "So what? There is an infinity of unusual numbers. Nothing special about them".
"How do you know?"
"Suppose that there is only a finite number of unusual natural numbers. Now calculate the sum of all those. That will clearly not be in the set. However, being the sum of all unusual natural numbers is clearly an unusual feature!. Q.E.D."
#11
Posted 2013-November-05, 12:19
#12
Posted 2013-November-05, 12:23
#13
Posted 2013-November-05, 15:31
As with statistics, things are only really remarkable if you predict them ahead of time, rather than ex post facto. It's really hard to predict who will win the lottery, but it's a good bet that someone will -- on the day after, there's not much point in saying that the person who won it had an infinitessimal chance.
#14
Posted 2013-November-05, 18:15
helene_t, on 2013-November-05, 09:23, said:
The set of natural numbers that are the sum of 3 consecutive cubes (of positive integers) is clearly countably infinite, since it can be put in 1-1 correspondence with the set of positive natural numbers in an obvious way: the first is [1^3 + 2^3 + 3^3], the second is [2^3 + 3^3 + 4^3] and, generally, the nth is [n^3 + (n+1)^3 + (n+2)^3].
This method generalises to show that any set of natural numbers defined in a suitably similar well-defined "unusual property" way is countably infinite (provided they are demonstrably distinct from one another).
#16
Posted 2013-November-05, 23:13
WellSpyder, on 2013-November-05, 06:15, said:
4441 hands (which I believe may be described as 4x1 on the other side of the Atlantic) are well known for being tricky to bid, but fortunately they aren't very common, with the result that in one or two systems I play they are more or less ignored and you are just expected to do the best you can. However, I played a 24-board match last night, and towards the end of the first half I realised that I was holding at least my 3rd 4441 hand of the evening. And there were two more in the second half. Hand records weren't available, and I can't remember for sure whether there had been any more in the first half before I started noticing their repeated appearance.
Anyway, assuming I "only" held five 4441 hands over the course of the 24 boards, I found myself wondering how unusual an occurence this was. According to my calculations, the chances of a given hand having a 4441 shape are just under 3%, so the expected number over the course of 24 boards is 0.72, but I wonder whether anyone can quickly work out the probability of at least 5 such hands. (I recall learning back in the dim and distant past - perhaps 35 years ago - about using a Normal approximation to a Binomial distribution, which might be one way of tackling this, but I've no real idea of how valid the approximation might be for these sort of numbers....)
Given your observation of 3 in the first 12 boards, the probability of getting exactly 5 in 24 boards is about 4.36% - a bit over one every 25 times that it happens.