The easiest fair games depend on equal, binary outcomes like flipping a coin or drawing a playing card that can only be either red or black. If a game depends on both players choosing an equally-probable outcome, how can one player have a massive advantage over the other?
Welcome to the Humble-Nishiyama Randomness Game, a variant of Walter Penney’s classic demonstration of the power of non-transitivity in simple games. In a straightforward transitive situation, A beats B and B beats C -- which means A beats C, too. But if A beats B, B beats C, and C beats A… we’ve gone non-transitive just like Rock, Paper, Scissors. By jumping into the non-transitive game loop at the most advantageous point, Player 2 can become an overwhelming favorite every time. It looks like dumb luck, but it’s really just smart math.
*** SOURCES ***
“Penney Ante: Counterintuitive Probabilities in Coin Tossing,” by RS Nickerson: ~sdunbar1/ProbabilityTheory/BackgroundPapers/Penney ante/
“Humble-Nishiyama Randomness Game - A New Variation on Penney’s Coin Game,” by Steve Humble and Yutaka Nishiyama:
“Probability of a tossed coin landing on edge,” by Daniel B. Murray and Scott W. Teare:
“Antibiotic-mediated antagonism leads to a bacterial game of rock–paper–scissors in vivo,” by Benjamin C. Kirkup & Margaret A. Riley:
*** LINKS ***
Vsauce2 Links
Twitter:
Facebook:
Hosted and Produced by Kevin Lieber
Instagram:
Twitter:
Podcast:
Research And Writing by Matthew Tabor
Editing by AspectScience
Huge Thanks To Paula Lieber
Get Vsauce’s favorite science and math toys delivered to your door!
Select Music By Jake Chudnow:
#education #vsauce2
18 views
635
245
7 months ago 00:31:59 1
Inside Interior Designer Sophie Paterson’s Surrey Home | House Tour
7 months ago 00:08:06 1
Do This Every Day To Lose Flabby Arms
7 months ago 00:15:04 1
Just Got Paid / Dazed and Confused - Joe Bonamassa - Royal Albert Hall - London 040424 4K HDR10+