simulation needed
#1
Posted 2013-July-25, 17:53
Can anyone help? TIA
Conditions. Both sides hold 20 HCP.
NS has 5-4 spades. EW has 9 hearts.
Restrict patterns for NS to
5233 // 4243 and
5233 // 4234
100 iterations.
List tricks made by NS with spades as trumps.
Need list of distribution. I will calculate the variance.
12 -
11 -
10 -
9 -
8 -
7 -
6 -
5 -
4 -
thanks, jogs
#2
Posted 2013-July-25, 20:23
North
12 = 1
11 = 4
10 = 13
9 = 53
8 = 83
7 = 39
6 = 7
South
12 = 1
11 = 3
10 = 13
9 = 53
8 = 80
7 = 43
6 = 7
#3
Posted 2013-July-25, 20:54
inquiry, on 2013-July-25, 20:23, said:
North
12 = 1
11 = 4
10 = 13
9 = 53
8 = 83
7 = 39
6 = 7
Thanks, inquiry.
average tricks = 8.000
standard deviation = 1.794
Quote
12 = 1
11 = 3
10 = 13
9 = 53
8 = 80
7 = 43
6 = 7
ave trks = 7.965
std dev. = 1.787
Was surprised by the high std dev.
Notice that 9 trumps produced only 8 tricks.
8 tricks was what I found from my small sample.
Lawrence/Wirgren was right. Flat patterns
produce fewer tricks.
This blind bid up to the level of your
trumps is wrong. Bergen raises aren't
protected by any physical law.
Should add that there is a minor bias favoring
the defense in double dummy. In live play
declarer may do 1/4 of a trick better.
#4
Posted 2013-July-25, 21:39
North
12 = 0
11 = 0
10 = 6
9 = 27
8 = 77
7 = 72
6 = 16
5 = 2
South
12 = 0
11 = 0
10 = 6
9 = 28
8 = 75
7 = 74
6 = 14
5 = 3
#5
Posted 2013-July-26, 07:26
inquiry, on 2013-July-25, 21:39, said:
Thanks, no problem. Have app in excel to solve variance.
Averaged only 7.15 tricks. This is much lower than I
expected. The bias for the defense in double dummy must
be huge. I was expecting 8 to 8.25 tricks.
Quote
12 = 0
11 = 0
10 = 6
9 = 27
8 = 77
7 = 72
6 = 16
5 = 2
ave trks = 7.115
std dev. = 2.365
Quote
12 = 0
11 = 0
10 = 6
9 = 28
8 = 75
7 = 74
6 = 14
5 = 3
ave trks = 7.150
std dev. = 2.312
#6
Posted 2013-July-26, 08:04
#7
Posted 2013-July-26, 08:24
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2013-July-26, 08:43
jogs, on 2013-July-25, 20:54, said:
inquiry, on 2013-July-25, 20:23, said:
North
12 = 1
11 = 4
10 = 13
9 = 53
8 = 83
7 = 39
6 = 7
Thanks, inquiry.
average tricks = 8.000
standard deviation = 1.794
Quote
12 = 1
11 = 3
10 = 13
9 = 53
8 = 80
7 = 43
6 = 7
ave trks = 7.965
std dev. = 1.787
Was surprised by the high std dev.
Notice that 9 trumps produced only 8 tricks.
8 tricks was what I found from my small sample.
Lawrence/Wirgren was right. Flat patterns
produce fewer tricks.
This blind bid up to the level of your
trumps is wrong. Bergen raises aren't
protected by any physical law.
Should add that there is a minor bias favoring
the defense in double dummy. In live play
declarer may do 1/4 of a trick better.
Now that I think about it, you have to be wrong here on several fronts. First, you say the first group averages 8.000 (quite precise). However, there are 46 numbers smaller than 8.00 in the test, 39 of them one trick less, 7 of them two tricks less. There are 70 numbers higher (53 one trick higher, 13 two trick higher, and others higher still). There is no way on god's green earth this averages 8.000. If you throw out the 39 of the 53 one trick higher and 7 of the one two tricks higher, you can readily (those average together to get 8), you will see why the entire population can not average 8.000.
The same holds true for when South was declarer. That has to average more than 8.0.
As far as proving or disproving LOTT, this as presented says nothing. The law of total tricks states that the total tricks equals the sum of your trump fit plus the sum of opponents. So the total tricks here would be (according to the law) 9 + 9 = 18. All this suggest is that with your two balanced hands and unrestricted opponents hands, there will be a total of 18 tricks. Since your average is just better than 8.0, their should be just less than 10. Until and unless you simulate the opponents tricks, this doesn't tell you nearly as much as you are claiming. However, no one doubts with shape you will win more tricks than without shape.
#9
Posted 2013-July-26, 08:56
Do you think you're the first one to attempt to verify the LOTT with a statistical analysis like this? Wasn't the original paper that described it based on statistics?
#11
Posted 2013-July-26, 10:53
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2013-July-26, 10:56
inquiry, on 2013-July-26, 08:43, said:
Now that I think about it, you have to be wrong here on several fronts. First, you say the first group averages 8.000 (quite precise). However, there are 46 numbers smaller than 8.00 in the test, 39 of them one trick less, 7 of them two tricks less. There are 70 numbers higher (53 one trick higher, 13 two trick higher, and others higher still). There is no way on god's green earth this averages 8.000. If you throw out the 39 of the 53 one trick higher and 7 of the one two tricks higher, you can readily (those average together to get 8), you will see why the entire population can not average 8.000.
The same holds true for when South was declarer. That has to average more than 8.0.
As far as proving or disproving LOTT, this as presented says nothing. The law of total tricks states that the total tricks equals the sum of your trump fit plus the sum of opponents. So the total tricks here would be (according to the law) 9 + 9 = 18. All this suggest is that with your two balanced hands and unrestricted opponents hands, there will be a total of 18 tricks. Since your average is just better than 8.0, their should be just less than 10. Until and unless you simulate the opponents tricks, this doesn't tell you nearly as much as you are claiming. However, no one doubts with shape you will win more tricks than without shape.
You better add them up. 1600 total tricks. It is
the nature of variance. The outliers have a greater
effect on the variance than those lumped in the middle.
The LoTT statement is too powerful. Total tricks equal
total trumps less than 40% of the time.
Cohen backed off and later stated the average tricks
equal total trumps. He needed to weaken the statement
more. The expected number of tricks equals total
trumps.
Now we 'know' when tricks is less than trumps. And
when tricks is more than trumps. Flat patterns produced
fewer tricks. Skewed patterns, those with singletons,
voids, and long second suits, produce more tricks than
trumps.
#14
Posted 2013-July-26, 11:22
Quote
12 = 0
11 = 0
10 = 6
9 = 27
8 = 77
7 = 72
6 = 16
5 = 2
Recalculated these.
ave trks = 7.645
std dev. = 0.948
#16
Posted 2013-July-26, 12:35
#17
Posted 2013-July-26, 12:39
jogs, on 2013-July-26, 10:56, said:
The LoTT statement is too powerful. Total tricks equal total trumps less than 40% of the time. Cohen backed off and later stated the average tricks equal total trumps. He needed to weaken the statement more. The expected number of tricks equals total trumps.
Now we 'know' when tricks is less than trumps. And when tricks is more than trumps. Flat patterns produced fewer tricks. Skewed patterns, those with singletons, voids, and long second suits, produce more tricks than trumps.
Maybe you should look again. The total tricks is not 1600. Nor in this case was total trick less than calculate 40% of the time. In fact, here the total tricks was less than 16 only 4 times (2%). Quite a difference. However, the deck was stacked in EW favor by your conditions. First, Hearts always split 2-2 for them. That would save a trick anytime 3-1 or 4-0 would cost a trick Ior more) sight unseen. Second, their 7 card minor always ran into a 3-3 split NS, while NS's 4-3 minor fit frequently runs into 4-2 or worse split (under the tested conditions). I think this "even" heart and "even" 3-3 minor split for EAST west adds a trick or so to the trick total.
Below are the 200 deal stats, with tricks won by north in spades or West in hearts as well as the total tricks on the hands. As noted, only four of the deals took LESS Than 16 total tricks (See below, a llst of tricks won on all 200 deals as played from north or west). So much for 40% being lower (at least in this case).
Total tricks on all 200 hands....
15 = 4
16 = 58
17 = 89
18 = 41
19 = 8
The only thing this shows is the balanced tricks for NS and their 9 spades subtracted from their 9 card fit numbers but seemed to add to the tricks EW could win with their 9 card fit. There was more than a trick difference between the tricks NS could win on their 9 card fit compared to tricks EW could win (also EW were allowed to have one hand with six or seven hearts... even more perhaps as random dealt for them).
Deal [sp] [he] total 1 8 8 16 2 7 10 17 3 6 9 15 4 8 9 17 5 8 9 17 6 7 9 16 7 7 11 18 8 6 13 19 9 7 9 16 10 8 8 16 11 7 10 17 12 8 10 18 13 7 11 18 14 8 9 17 15 6 10 16 16 8 10 18 17 8 10 18 18 9 8 17 19 8 9 17 20 6 11 17 21 8 9 17 22 6 11 17 23 6 11 17 24 7 11 18 25 7 10 17 26 6 11 17 27 8 10 18 28 9 9 18 29 8 9 17 30 10 8 18 31 8 9 17 32 7 10 17 33 8 9 17 34 8 8 16 35 9 9 18 36 7 9 16 37 8 9 17 38 6 10 16 39 9 8 17 40 8 8 16 41 8 10 18 42 8 9 17 43 6 11 17 44 8 9 17 45 8 9 17 46 7 9 16 47 8 9 17 48 7 9 16 49 9 8 17 50 6 10 16 51 7 9 16 52 8 10 18 53 8 9 17 54 8 10 18 55 8 11 19 56 7 9 16 57 9 8 17 58 8 9 17 59 7 9 16 60 8 10 18 61 8 10 18 62 8 8 16 63 7 9 16 64 7 10 17 65 7 11 18 66 9 8 17 67 7 10 17 68 6 11 17 69 7 9 16 70 10 6 16 71 7 9 16 72 8 9 17 73 7 10 17 74 7 9 16 75 7 9 16 76 7 10 17 77 8 11 19 78 8 9 17 79 9 8 17 80 7 9 16 81 8 11 19 82 7 10 17 83 7 10 17 84 8 9 17 85 7 10 17 86 8 10 18 87 7 10 17 88 7 9 16 89 8 8 16 90 9 9 18 91 6 10 16 92 7 10 17 93 9 8 17 94 7 10 17 95 8 10 18 96 7 10 17 97 8 8 16 98 9 9 18 99 8 9 17 100 7 11 18 101 7 10 17 102 6 10 16 103 8 9 17 104 8 8 16 105 8 10 18 106 7 9 16 107 9 9 18 108 7 10 17 109 7 10 17 110 8 8 16 111 9 9 18 112 5 11 16 113 7 10 17 114 8 8 16 115 8 9 17 116 7 10 17 117 7 10 17 118 8 9 17 119 6 11 17 120 8 10 18 121 8 11 19 122 9 9 18 123 9 8 17 124 7 11 18 125 9 8 17 126 8 7 15 127 8 9 17 128 8 9 17 129 8 10 18 130 8 8 16 131 7 9 16 132 7 10 17 133 7 10 17 134 5 11 16 135 9 9 18 136 8 7 15 137 9 7 16 138 7 9 16 139 10 7 17 140 9 7 16 141 7 10 17 142 9 9 18 143 7 9 16 144 7 11 18 145 8 9 17 146 7 9 16 147 8 9 17 148 7 10 17 149 7 9 16 150 7 11 18 151 7 9 16 152 7 9 16 153 9 10 19 154 8 9 17 155 9 9 18 156 8 9 17 157 8 9 17 158 8 9 17 159 9 9 18 160 8 11 19 161 7 10 17 162 8 10 18 163 10 8 18 164 9 10 19 165 8 9 17 166 7 10 17 167 7 9 16 168 7 9 16 169 7 10 17 170 8 10 18 171 9 8 17 172 7 9 16 173 8 8 16 174 7 10 17 175 8 8 16 176 7 9 16 177 10 7 17 178 7 9 16 179 7 10 17 180 7 10 17 181 10 8 18 182 9 9 18 183 9 8 17 184 7 9 16 185 7 9 16 186 6 11 17 187 8 10 18 188 8 10 18 189 7 10 17 190 8 9 17 191 8 9 17 192 6 10 16 193 7 8 15 194 8 9 17 195 8 8 16 196 7 9 16 197 7 10 17 198 8 8 16 199 8 8 16 200 8 9 17
#19
Posted 2013-July-26, 14:02
johnu, on 2013-July-26, 12:35, said:
Read his article. Neither Cohen or Bloom posted expected
value or variance for any of their data.
#20
Posted 2013-July-26, 14:09
barmar, on 2013-July-26, 08:56, said:
Do you think you're the first one to attempt to verify the LOTT with a statistical analysis like this? Wasn't the original paper that described it based on statistics?
On Chapter 9 p216 Cohen listed many adjustment factors.
He provided no statistical analysis.
It is really difficult to isolate the effects of
any particular parameter.