mjj29, on 2012-February-13, 03:44, said:
Really? I don't understand the concept of a datum - I have no idea why you would consider the mean of the available scores a reasonable thing to imp against or why it's reasonable to discard that number of outliers. I don't understand why it's ever reasonable to imp against a score that noone (including the computer) actually got on that board.
That is because you are not typical. Poor players find imps much much easier to understand where it is their score imped against another score: the datum.
mjj29, on 2012-February-13, 03:44, said:
Cross-imps, on the other hand, are both very easy to explain to people ('you imp against everyone and take the average') and seem much more sensible when you consider them in any detail.
Far more difficult, far less comprehensible. Not to you, but I am not talking about you.
mjj29, on 2012-February-13, 03:44, said:
Surely poor players don't worry about the scoring at all though and would be happy with any method of scoring. At best they want to know 'is it IMPs or pairs', although most of them don't change their play either way, it just gives them a different set of excuses for bidding failing games. Why, therefore, should we give them a statistically bogus method of scoring, rather than a reasonable one?
First of all, it is not statistically bogus, so stop trying to sneak such comments in. It is statistically fine. What you mean is that you and good players believe cross-imps is better, and can produce a justification.
Secondly, to repeat, poor players understand imps as a method of taking their score, another score, and there you are: imps.