Rolfe
Adult human female
My "hundred doors" example was to show that it did matter whether or not Monty was deliberately avoiding the car.
If you chose at random, you'd have a 1 in 100 chance of having got the car. Assuming you didn't, and Monty was opening doors at random, the overwhelming probability (98 out of 100 I think) is that he would reveal the car at some point during all the subsequent door-opening.
If the car is still hidden when only two doors are still shut, then what do you think? Either you hit lucky with your original guess (1 in 100), or Monty by chance has left the car till the last door (another 1 in 100), or he is deliberately avoiding the car. The last is by far the most probable scenario, and it's intuitively obvious that you'd switch.
The other example I had was also to show if he is avoiding the car. Just run the three-doors trial a number of times. 33% of the time Monty should reveal the car, if he's just opening either of the doors at random. In that case, switching won't help you win more cars, but it won't spoil your record either - it's a 50/50 shot. If Monty never reveals the car, he's deliberately avoiding it, and in that case you benefit from switching by a 1/3 to 2/3 ratio. So the answer is, switch. If he's not avoiding the car, then it makes no difference, if he is, then you improve your odds. You switch to take advantage of the latter case if it applies, as there's no down-side if it doesn't.
In the online version quoted by the earlier poster, it's obviously set up so that Monty never reveals the car.
Rolfe.
If you chose at random, you'd have a 1 in 100 chance of having got the car. Assuming you didn't, and Monty was opening doors at random, the overwhelming probability (98 out of 100 I think) is that he would reveal the car at some point during all the subsequent door-opening.
If the car is still hidden when only two doors are still shut, then what do you think? Either you hit lucky with your original guess (1 in 100), or Monty by chance has left the car till the last door (another 1 in 100), or he is deliberately avoiding the car. The last is by far the most probable scenario, and it's intuitively obvious that you'd switch.
The other example I had was also to show if he is avoiding the car. Just run the three-doors trial a number of times. 33% of the time Monty should reveal the car, if he's just opening either of the doors at random. In that case, switching won't help you win more cars, but it won't spoil your record either - it's a 50/50 shot. If Monty never reveals the car, he's deliberately avoiding it, and in that case you benefit from switching by a 1/3 to 2/3 ratio. So the answer is, switch. If he's not avoiding the car, then it makes no difference, if he is, then you improve your odds. You switch to take advantage of the latter case if it applies, as there's no down-side if it doesn't.
In the online version quoted by the earlier poster, it's obviously set up so that Monty never reveals the car.
Rolfe.