imbalance in hand strength algorithm
#1
Posted 2020-November-01, 14:20
#2
Posted 2020-November-01, 15:48
No one has ever been able to demonstrate anything
Perhaps you will be the first (though I doubt it)
#3
Posted 2020-November-01, 16:46
rockeron, on 2020-November-01, 14:20, said:
Hrothgar is right about the hands themselves being random, but there is definitely a bias in the scores. The correlation between a positive score and positive IMPs is extremely high.
The reason for this is that each board is scored against (typically) 16 other tables in BBO, where the standard is quite variable. If you bid and make a fairly straightforward game, there is enough randomness that you will likely pick up a few IMPs. Similarly, if you make a partscore you're doing well even if there might be a better place to play.
This does skew perceptions of results. If you are just playing at a casual table you can choose old vugraph deals (the table host selects Deal Source from the menu to do this). That leads to comparisons against two tables who at least in theory can play pretty good bridge.
#4
Posted 2020-November-01, 17:46
sfi, on 2020-November-01, 16:46, said:
The reason for this is that each board is scored against (typically) 16 other tables in BBO, where the standard is quite variable. If you bid and make a fairly straightforward game, there is enough randomness that you will likely pick up a few IMPs. Similarly, if you make a partscore you're doing well even if there might be a better place to play.
This does skew perceptions of results. If you are just playing at a casual table you can choose old vugraph deals (the table host selects Deal Source from the menu to do this). That leads to comparisons against two tables who at least in theory can play pretty good bridge.
The OP was about virtual club games, not casual tables.
In general, variance is higher when there are fewer comparisons, that's just a matter of statistics.
#5
Posted 2020-November-01, 17:56
rockeron, on 2020-November-01, 14:20, said:
You would be wrong. I accidentally got access to the list and your name was on it. I would have investigated further but I didn't want to get noticed and put on the list myself. You'll just have to live with it until whoever put you on the list decides to take you off the list.
#7
Posted 2020-November-01, 18:22
#8
Posted 2020-November-01, 18:51
barmar, on 2020-November-01, 18:22, said:
Sure, but there are many clubs with varying standards. If the standard of play is better, you will have less variance in results and be more likely to be rewarded for good decisions rather than for simply holding better cards.
#9
Posted 2020-November-02, 01:45
For the next 1000 boards you play ad all your HCP together and dived it by 1000 and you see the outcome will be 10.
If that a problem start a practice table and deal 1000 boards and do the same.
In any sport we always look for a excuse why we lost and it can't be us.
#10
Posted 2020-November-02, 12:29
Note that I trust the Common Game's dealer even more than BBOs; their whole shtick is to get pros to analyze hands and play as a "serious fun" event, and if their dealer was proven to be non-random, the pros would disappear faster than nightlife when the lights come on, never to return.
But it is a concern with random club owner making up boards with their hand-hacked card shuffling program, or if they use van Staveren's dealer (not BigDeal) which is intended for analysis, not for explicit randomness. Hopefully, nobody does this.
But in general, the answer is "no there isn't". Humans are pattern-matchers, bridge players doubly so. There's *always* a pattern to find in a session of 18 boards. Frankly, there's seriously often a significant bias in the hands in a session of 18 boards. But over 1000 18-board sessions, it does even out (unless you're me. Always Pass As Dealer is a convention on my card (not partner's) (yes, that's a joke, but it's a very well-known one by my partners)).
#11
Posted 2020-November-02, 14:50
If that is the case surely you can share the pattern, other can verify it, and if you are right, you'll have found a bug in the random hand generator.
In that case you should be awarded life long free premium membership.
Until this reward is published I don't believe you. I believe that you don't realize that randomness does include long periods of below average strength hand for a few unhappy pairs out of loads of pairs, just as it does in real life.
#12
Posted 2020-November-02, 17:15
#13
Posted 2020-November-03, 18:02