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ACBL: When does UI become AI?
#1
Posted 2012-August-26, 09:24
Sparked by a long discussion on BridgeWinners following an article by Debbie Rosenberg:
P fails to alert. I gather taht at some point in the auction, P may make a call (usually one that was required by his mistake????) that in effect removes the UI constraints. This question may be way too vague for any clarity at all, but can someone spell out the whys and hows of this kind of thing? Examples welcome, since I don't even know enough to generate one....
P fails to alert. I gather taht at some point in the auction, P may make a call (usually one that was required by his mistake????) that in effect removes the UI constraints. This question may be way too vague for any clarity at all, but can someone spell out the whys and hows of this kind of thing? Examples welcome, since I don't even know enough to generate one....
#2
Posted 2012-August-26, 10:04
You look at your hand. You look at the bidding. You have several possible calls you can make (logical alternatives, or LAs). Which one do you choose?
If you have no UI, you can choose any one you like. If you have UI, then you may not choose an LA which demonstrably could have been suggested over another by that UI.
How does AI figure into it? If the AI eliminates all the LAs but one, you can make that call even if it demonstrably could have been suggested by the UI.
Some will tell you the constraint is even looser, that if you have UI that suggests a call, and AI that also suggests that call, you can legally make that call. They're wrong.
If you have no UI, you can choose any one you like. If you have UI, then you may not choose an LA which demonstrably could have been suggested over another by that UI.
How does AI figure into it? If the AI eliminates all the LAs but one, you can make that call even if it demonstrably could have been suggested by the UI.
Some will tell you the constraint is even looser, that if you have UI that suggests a call, and AI that also suggests that call, you can legally make that call. They're wrong.
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#3
Posted 2012-August-26, 10:23
If you have UI (unauthorised information), you have UI. However, you may also have AI (authorised information) that reduces the number of logical alternatives (LAs) there are to the action that was suggested by the UI. This may reach the point where there are no LAs to that action, and then you could do it, despite it being suggested by the UI.
Gordon Rainsford
London UK
London UK
#4
Posted 2012-August-26, 12:02
blackshoe, on 2012-August-26, 10:04, said:
If you have no UI, you can choose any one you like. If you have UI, then you may not choose an LA which demonstrably could have been suggested over another by that UI.
How does AI figure into it? If the AI eliminates all the LAs but one, you can make that call even if it demonstrably could have been suggested by the UI.
How does AI figure into it? If the AI eliminates all the LAs but one, you can make that call even if it demonstrably could have been suggested by the UI.
AI figures into it in a more basic way than that. "could demonstrably have been suggested over another by the extraneous information" means an action that, in view of the UI together with our AI, appears more likely to succeed than it would have based on our AI alone.
For example, we need not consider UI obligations when the opponents ask about a call and our partner explains it according to our agreements and our own understanding at the time of the call.
(I know this is not the kind of scenario the OP envisaged in which we gain AI subsequently to the UI, but answers in this thread ought to apply correctly to this case as well.)
#5
Posted 2012-August-28, 11:06
How about this example:
Your partner opens a 12-14 NT and you respond 2D (transfer to hearts) intending to signoff in 2H, but partner does not announce/alert. Your LHO pass, as does partner. RHO doubles!
You have UI that partner may not know you hoped to signoff in hearts. Are there conditions under which you can/cannot now bid 2H?
Your partner opens a 12-14 NT and you respond 2D (transfer to hearts) intending to signoff in 2H, but partner does not announce/alert. Your LHO pass, as does partner. RHO doubles!
You have UI that partner may not know you hoped to signoff in hearts. Are there conditions under which you can/cannot now bid 2H?
#6
Posted 2012-August-28, 17:19
TimG, on 2012-August-28, 11:06, said:
How about this example:
Your partner opens a 12-14 NT and you respond 2D (transfer to hearts) intending to signoff in 2H, but partner does not announce/alert. Your LHO pass, as does partner. RHO doubles!
You have UI that partner may not know you hoped to signoff in hearts. Are there conditions under which you can/cannot now bid 2H?
Your partner opens a 12-14 NT and you respond 2D (transfer to hearts) intending to signoff in 2H, but partner does not announce/alert. Your LHO pass, as does partner. RHO doubles!
You have UI that partner may not know you hoped to signoff in hearts. Are there conditions under which you can/cannot now bid 2H?
This gets kind of complicated. My first reaction when partner fails to announce my transfer is usually "Oh, damn, he's forgotten we play transfers!" With some partners it's more "Oh, damn, he's asleep again!" In both cases I have UI, but while in the former case it suggests I bid on, In the latter I don't think it suggests anything. (but it may be difficult to convince a director of this, and it will likely be impossible to convince my opponent). When partner passes, it just reinforces my thought. In the first case, I'd feel like I was taking advantage of UI if I bid on (in most cases). In the second, I wouldn't. Note that I haven't said a think about LAs here. I'm not talking about Law 16B that's the director's part of the ship I'm talking about Law 73C and its "must carefully avoid taking advantage" provision which is the player's part of the ship.
This hand:
would, I think, qualify as "no logical alternative" to bidding 2♥, even after an unannounced transfer. Anything better (or less bad) for play in diamonds would not, IMO.
--------------------
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#7
Posted 2012-August-28, 21:32
What if we can produce written evidence of an agreement that a pass of the transfer shows ♥ tolerance and a bad hand for playing in ♦
#8
Posted 2012-August-29, 05:54
Quote
How about this example:
Your partner opens a 12-14 NT and you respond 2D (transfer to hearts) intending to signoff in 2H, but partner does not announce/alert. Your LHO pass, as does partner. RHO doubles!
You have UI that partner may not know you hoped to signoff in hearts. Are there conditions under which you can/cannot now bid 2H?
Your partner opens a 12-14 NT and you respond 2D (transfer to hearts) intending to signoff in 2H, but partner does not announce/alert. Your LHO pass, as does partner. RHO doubles!
You have UI that partner may not know you hoped to signoff in hearts. Are there conditions under which you can/cannot now bid 2H?
Surely you are allowed to bid 2H (keep playing according to the system), but your partner must keep playing according to "the system from his point of view" and correct to 3D if he prefers diamonds, at which point things get interesting?
Yes you have UI from a failure to alert, but I don't really think you should have to try to put yourself in partner's shoes and imagine what he's thinking. How exactly is one meant to know what partner is thinking?
ahydra
#9
Posted 2012-August-29, 11:25
ahydra, on 2012-August-29, 05:54, said:
Surely you are allowed to bid 2H (keep playing according to the system), but your partner must keep playing according to "the system from his point of view" and correct to 3D if he prefers diamonds, at which point things get interesting?
If partner had cheerily Announced 2♦ as a transfer, and then slammed the pass card on the table with a smile, would you pull with some random hand like T86 AJ865 T74 32 ? Of course not - in fact, you'd probably bid 3♦ when the double gets pulled. You're keeping playing according to the system by passing - partner heard you had hearts and decided to play 2♦. Maybe he'll change his mind now that he knows about the bad break, and play in the weak hand's long suit - maybe he's 3=2=6=2 and won't. Of course we know it doesn't break badly - well, 4-4 isn't a *bad* break, just unfortunate - but that's based on the UI!).
Quote
Yes you have UI from a failure to alert, but I don't really think you should have to try to put yourself in partner's shoes and imagine what he's thinking. How exactly is one meant to know what partner is thinking?
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)
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