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Main => General Board => Topic started by: simon on June 16, 2009, 10:44:32 PM

Title: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: simon on June 16, 2009, 10:44:32 PM
A roulette wheel with 36 numbers and no zeroes is spun 200 times.  We are not concerned with house edge, bets or payouts, only to know if after 200 spins of the wheel, can we expect to see more of one particular sequence of events vs another particular sequence of events.

The wheel is divided between two groups of numbers.  Group A has 20 numbers and Group B has the other 16 numbers.  After every spin of the wheel, the outcome decisions of "A" or "B" are recorded one after the other.

After 200 spins, two particular sequence of events will be counted:

Sequence 1 is:  (....A-B-A...) which means, a single B contained within one or more A's.

Sequence 2 is:  (....A-B...B-A...) which means, two or more B's contained within one or more A's.

To put it another way, every time we see a single B in the pattern we will call this a B "chop", and every time we see 2 or more B's in a row in the pattern, we will call this a B "run."

My questions:

1)  After 200 spins, can we expect to see more B "chops" than B "runs"?

2)  After any amount of spins, can we expect to see more B "chops" than B "runs" and if so, how many spins are required for their to be a majority of B chops over B runs by a margin of at least 20%?

Reasons we might expect to see more B chops than B runs within x amount of trials:

1)  It has been stated that we can expect half as many runs (consecutive decisions of the same outcome) of 2 as runs of 1, and 1/2 as many runs of 3 as runs of 2, and half as many runs of 4 as runs of 3, etc... So that in for example 247 trials the ideal distribution of runs is 64 runs of 1, 32 runs of 2, 16 runs of 3, 8 runs of 4, 4 runs of 5, 2 runs of 6, and 1 run of 7, and the total of any run within x amount of trials will be equal to the total of all runs greater (which is why it is useless to "wait" for a long run of one particular chance in order to bet the opposite, because in the long run the total of all runs that will occur that are longer than the run you are betting against, will be equal to the total number of runs that you thought were safe to bet against, and the house edge will prevail.)

Therefore, we should expect to see half as many runs (two or more B's in a row within the pattern) as chops (one B within the pattern.)

2)  Since there are less numbers in Group B than Group A, B is less likely to repeat, and more likely to be followed by A.

Reasons we should not expect to see more B chops than B runs within x amount of spins:

The above two statements are either not valid, or not valid as concerns this particular trial.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 17, 2009, 01:08:31 PM
Just one question about these runs. Why should each 200 - 247 set of spins produce similar results. Each time you sit down for eight hours of play you see something completely different. I mean you will still see runs and chop but they won't be happening at the same times for each session. In a case like this, recognizing the differing types is more important than the timing. Don't you have a plan for the different types of conditions that you see? I would be more concerned about the duration of the dominating conditions. Some times trend patterns reveal to you similar sized forms of domination types. There's no math to help you here. Each session will mostly be different. If you want a baseline then test millions of spins to get the averages.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 17, 2009, 01:12:17 PM
In the random game of roulette there are no trends, and there are no patterns.  There are only disconnected links.  There's nothing there that you can exploit.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 17, 2009, 01:16:20 PM
Quote from: Herb on June 17, 2009, 01:12:17 PM
In the random game of roulette there are no trends, and there are no patterns.  There are only disconnected links.  There's nothing there that you can exploit.

Hey Herb, if you begin to bet on black after five blacks in a row and the blacks continue to hit for ten more spins have you used a reason for betting black or not?
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 17, 2009, 01:16:59 PM
No
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 17, 2009, 01:23:07 PM
Quote from: Herb on June 17, 2009, 01:16:59 PM
No

So that advertisement on TV for pattern recognition software for the stock market is a phony concept too?

Guess what Herb, Visual ballistics and dealer signature don't exist either. In fact the roulette wheel is really a flying saucer from outer space, and the aliens always win. Gads Herb. How can you be so closed minded? It's almost astonishing. It's like defending a flat world.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Coxx16 on June 17, 2009, 01:30:03 PM
Just as I suspected.....its the damn aliens! LOL
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Tangram on June 17, 2009, 01:37:27 PM
Gizmo,

This doesn't mean I completely agree with Herb about the disconnected links, but stock market movements are not disconnected, because many of the patterns are based on psychology which isn't present in the numbers from a roulette wheel. History does matter in the stock market.  :ok:
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 17, 2009, 02:10:39 PM
Quote from: Tangram on June 17, 2009, 01:37:27 PM
Gizmo,

This doesn't mean I completely agree with Herb about the disconnected links, but stock market movements are not disconnected, because many of the patterns are based on psychology which isn't present in the numbers from a roulette wheel. History does matter in the stock market.  :ok:

Pattern recognition is a cognitive process that occurs in the mind of the observer. It is not a psychic linkage to the mechanical process for achieving a random outcome. The mechanical process is a true form of "disconnected links." The cognitive process is however not. The perception of linkage comes down to two and perhaps several conclusions. One, the "gamblers fallacy" where something must be due because something else happened, and at least that "clustering analysis" can be used for a premise to establish an imagined  bet selection process that can be tested while using it for degrees of effectiveness.

I would rather react to data than pretend that nothing is the only significant reality that can exist. I gave up on discovering that randomness was really just meaningless events. It's far more than that in my imagination.

It comes down to using what works when it is working. That works for everyone too. Nothing works very well while nothing exists. It's impossible to base bet selections on nothing though. I'm a bet selection, MM expert. I take that into casinos and win with it all the time. I could not bet based on nothing. Nothing is a vacuum of the imagination. My house does not need what sucks to clean it.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: simon on June 17, 2009, 02:54:23 PM
I thought that in x number of spins, this....

we can expect half as many runs (consecutive decisions of the same outcome) of 2 as runs of 1, and 1/2 as many runs of 3 as runs of 2, and half as many runs of 4 as runs of 3, etc...

...was true (but maybe it's not-- really I don't know exactly what law of probability it is, but I have seen it here and there. )  And if it WAS true, then the system I have in mind would work, especially I would think if I am betting a larger group of numbers (group A) against a smaller group of numbers (group A to follow B, instead of a repeat of B.)

The system I have in mind would only sustain ONE loss for every run of the B group, no matter how long or short (greater than 2 in a row) the run was.  Therefore there should be more wins on single hits of a specific chance, than runs.  But that is only true if it is true that there should be half as many chops as runs of two, etc.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 17, 2009, 03:07:35 PM
Your system will have differing levels of it working and differing degrees of it not working. So you might want to use a method to figure when best to use it. I have discovered that just walking into a casino and walking right up to the table does not trigger that it's a best time to use many of my systems. Sometimes pinching a c**ktail waitress triggers wins.

I'm always fascinated by rule based systems. There is no consideration for situational awareness.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Tangram on June 17, 2009, 05:02:27 PM
Quotewe can expect half as many runs (consecutive decisions of the same outcome) of 2 as runs of 1, and 1/2 as many runs of 3 as runs of 2, and half as many runs of 4 as runs of 3, etc... 

Simon,

This is only valid for the even chances (that's why successively longer streaks occur half as often). For your system, if you're talking about the "B" group streaks, then the chance of a series of 2 is (16/36)2, the chance of a series of 3 is (16/36)3, etc. So the multiplying factor is not half, as in the ECs, but 16/36. ie a series of 2 will occur 16/36 times as often as a single, a series of 3 will occur 16/36 times as often as a series of 2, etc.

Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 18, 2009, 11:28:48 PM
QuoteGizmotron wrote -"Guess what Herb, Visual ballistics and dealer signature don't exist either. In fact the roulette wheel is really a flying saucer from outer space, and the aliens always win. Gads Herb. How can you be so closed minded? It's almost astonishing. It's like defending a flat world."

Sorry Gizmotron, I was just stating the facts.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 19, 2009, 03:04:11 AM
Quote from: Herb on June 18, 2009, 11:28:48 PM
Sorry Gizmotron, I was just stating the facts.

Herb, we are all entitled to our own opinions but we are not all entitled to our own set of facts. You have not made a scientific effort to refute clustering analysis and how I claim it applies to Roulette randomness too.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 19, 2009, 02:23:26 PM
Gizmotron,

Clustering analysis???

Do you make this stuff up as you go?
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 19, 2009, 02:49:32 PM
Quote from: Herb on June 19, 2009, 02:23:26 PM
Gizmotron,

Clustering analysis???

Do you make this stuff up as you go?

You really do hold the ground of those that never look beyond their own perspective.

Look it up on the internet. Do I have to bottle feed you with this stuff. Part of clustering analysis pertains to pattern recognition.  I'm telling you that not only do all these characteristics exist in tracking past spins but that you can use mathematical predictors to verify it. I don't use math but you need to be shown that there are real facts out there that refute your opinions. Then there is me telling you that I use this method as my advantage play technique.

This: "Cluster analysis or clustering is the assignment of a set of observations into subsets (called clusters) so that observations in the same cluster are similar in some sense. Clustering is a method of unsupervised learning, and a common technique for statistical data analysis used in many fields, including machine learning, data mining, pattern recognition, image analysis and bioinformatics."

There it is, right before your eyes "pattern recognition."

I don't need to write a peer reviewed white paper on this do I? Does pattern recognition and clustering analysis have to be written & published, as it pertains to gambling, before you will admit that you have not recognized that information yet.

Your problem is that I'm right here sharing it with a few people outside the scientific community, and not selling it as a scammer too. You can't believe that the world is not flat.

If you are so smart or informed than make a defense against it. Name calling and marginalizing because you think it's just made up is childish. Step up bud. The floor is yours.

Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 19, 2009, 02:53:46 PM
QuoteThis: "Cluster analysis or clustering is the assignment of a set of observations into subsets (called clusters) so that observations in the same cluster are similar in some sense. Clustering is a method of unsupervised learning, and a common technique for statistical data analysis used in many fields, including machine learning, data mining, pattern recognition, image analysis and bioinformatics."

Gizmotron,

Can you give me an example as it pertains to roulette and can you demonstrate how you can win with it?



Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 19, 2009, 03:05:51 PM
Quote from: Herb on June 19, 2009, 02:53:46 PM
Gizmotron,

Can you give me an example as it pertains to roulette and can you demonstrate how you can win with it?

It very true what Victor just quoted, There is no "Magical Pattern."

I've stated that dominances, patterns, global effect, trends, and sequences of series all give me an advantage. I've learned how to recognize when those characteristics are in that advantage state. Here is a free one. Of the three dozens, one dozen often sleeps or hits so seldom that it is a dominance of the other two dozens. Now I know how to jump on that and bet it very aggressively. We never get past seeing what I call an advantage believable. We never get into talking about how to attack the advantage. I'm so bored by the disbelief that watching grass grow has become very exciting compared to this.

Really. If you accepted that dozens sleep for 10 to 20 spins, commonly, would you know how to take advantage of that? I guarantee you that if that held up as true you could kill the casino far more than any VB or DS. I wonder why everyone doesn't know this.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 19, 2009, 03:31:59 PM
QuoteHere is a free one. Of the three dozens, one dozen often sleeps or hits so seldom that it is a dominance of the other two dozens. Now I know how to jump on that and bet it very aggressively. We never get past seeing what I call an advantage believable. We never get into talking about how to attack the advantage. I'm so bored by the disbelief that watching grass grow has become very exciting compared to this.

Really. If you accepted that dozens sleep for 10 to 20 spins, commonly, would you know how to take advantage of that? I guarantee you that if that held up as true you could kill the casino far more than any VB or DS. I wonder why everyone doesn't know this.

Gizmotron,

You've just described gambler's fallacy. 

Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: gizmotron on June 19, 2009, 03:41:38 PM
Quote from: Herb on June 19, 2009, 03:31:59 PM
Gizmotron,

You've just described gambler's fallacy. 

You just exampled arrogance. At know time did I advocate that something was due. You are a perfect reason to not share anything on this forum. You also dodged the question about pattern recognition for the last time. Let HERB be the administrator. He is the only one that needs all the help he can get. I'm done for life. I quite this forum for life.
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: rss on June 19, 2009, 03:59:41 PM
what i cannot understand is that you are always saying that you never advocate that something is due, and on the other hand, somehow you recognize a pattern is due, cos random follows a pattern or whatever.

Now i dont want to insinuate something, but why have you never showed us an example on how you play? maybe someone can send you spins and you can tell us what is the pattern etc?
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Herb on June 19, 2009, 05:11:59 PM
 
QuoteOf the three dozens, one dozen often sleeps or hits so seldom that it is a dominance of the other two dozens. Now I know how to jump on that and bet it very aggressively.

Gizmotron,

You're saying that one of the dozens is more likely to hit.  Again, this is very clearly gambler's fallacy.

If you disagree, then please explain why you would make this bet.  How is it that this is not gambler's fallacy?

Regards,

Herb                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          /.\
Title: Re: would love to get the answer to this math question
Post by: Arteinvivo on June 19, 2009, 09:33:21 PM
I agree with Herb, this is invisible inner gambler's fallacy.  :laugh:

You would need luck or a huge bankroll to survive the terrible blue screen of death. (nolinks://nolinks.youtube.com/watch?v=RgriTO8UHvs)