I have been an enthusiastic fan of the board game Pandemic since I first played it in 2008. I like it because it involves cooperation and careful planning, which makes it a good way to talk to people through a game. For several years, I’ve been playing a lunchtime game once a week with friends. In 2013, Z-Man Games came out with a version of
(
Read more... )
Comments 11
Reply
Reply
Reply
Off on a side track, I'm puzzled about whether the whole "noise added by the other three slots" thing I was on about is a real thing. The argument against is, isn't "given Role A, do we win?" *some* Bernoulli process? So what if it's done by random choice of other roles and then depending on those -- it still boils down to success some P% of the time.
Let's see, concretely, it would be whether the confidence interval on e.g. the success is what you'd get for a p=0.841 binomial, or whether it's actually a wider CI? If success is a plain old binomial distribution and we've got 486 / 578 = 84.1%, I get the 95% interval is +/- 3.0%. Is that calculation the same way you got your +/- 3.0% too?
I think the "argument against" is right. But I'd have to expand an example to convince myself. And I still don't get what's wrong with the intuition for there being a real effect because of summing non-IID Bernoullis.
Reply
Leave a comment