I'm brushing up on Baye's rule and this simple brain teaser has me hung up. I explain it graphically, but I can't explain it using Baye's equation.
You have a revolver and two rounds are put in adjacent chambers. Your friend fires first, then passes it to you. Do you spin and shoot or just shoot?
The probability you survive is 75% if you just shoot, because the fact that he didn't die removes 2 of six possibilities.
BB0000, B0000B are removed
So you have 0000BB, 000BB0, 00BB00 and 0BB000. The latter being a bad situation for you.
But how does that work into the Baye's Theorem? P(B|A)=P(A|B)P(B)/P(A)
That doesn't make 75% to me P(B|A) the probability you survive given your friend didn't die on the first shot.
P(A|B) that you die given that your friend did not (1/4)
P(B) probability that you live, (3/5)
P(A) probability that you die, (2/5)
(1/4*3/5)/(2/5)= 15/40 ~37%
What am a screwing up here?
Next question, you start in a corner of a square, you move to an adjacent corner 50% of the time in either direction. One turn passes. What is the expected number of moves to return to the starting point.
50% it will take 1 move (move back where you came from)
the other 50% you will move away to a place where it will take at least 2 moves
if you are at kitty corner position the chance of moving to the origin in two moves is 2*.5^2
at the other corner you have a 50% of returning to the origin or not.
2/3 of the time you are in a position to return to the origin 50% of the time, and 1/3 of the time you are in a position to return to the origin in two turns 2*.5^2, and .5^3 it will take 3 moves.
I just start getting mixed up here, because it could oscillate back and forth and never get to the origin. What am I doing wrong?
You have a revolver and two rounds are put in adjacent chambers. Your friend fires first, then passes it to you. Do you spin and shoot or just shoot?
The probability you survive is 75% if you just shoot, because the fact that he didn't die removes 2 of six possibilities.
BB0000, B0000B are removed
So you have 0000BB, 000BB0, 00BB00 and 0BB000. The latter being a bad situation for you.
But how does that work into the Baye's Theorem? P(B|A)=P(A|B)P(B)/P(A)
That doesn't make 75% to me P(B|A) the probability you survive given your friend didn't die on the first shot.
P(A|B) that you die given that your friend did not (1/4)
P(B) probability that you live, (3/5)
P(A) probability that you die, (2/5)
(1/4*3/5)/(2/5)= 15/40 ~37%
What am a screwing up here?
Next question, you start in a corner of a square, you move to an adjacent corner 50% of the time in either direction. One turn passes. What is the expected number of moves to return to the starting point.
50% it will take 1 move (move back where you came from)
the other 50% you will move away to a place where it will take at least 2 moves
if you are at kitty corner position the chance of moving to the origin in two moves is 2*.5^2
at the other corner you have a 50% of returning to the origin or not.
2/3 of the time you are in a position to return to the origin 50% of the time, and 1/3 of the time you are in a position to return to the origin in two turns 2*.5^2, and .5^3 it will take 3 moves.
I just start getting mixed up here, because it could oscillate back and forth and never get to the origin. What am I doing wrong?