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Sleeping Beauty Problem
For those who haven't seen it, here is the wording:
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However, as an outside observer, we know it had to be 50/50 in the actual toss, so where does the difference enter? I think I'm in the 1/3 camp, but can't fully justify it. What if she is awoken once after a heads toss, and 100,000 times after a tails toss, should she believe with near certainty that tails was thrown? Seems almost like she should be able to correctly guess 2/3 of the time that it is Monday, but the number of times she is awoken should have no effect on the perceived likelihood of what was tossed. |
Re: Sleeping Beauty Problem
Your prior probability of the coin being heads is 50%. Your current new information, being awake with no memory, is uninformative because it happens with 100% certainty if it's heads and also with 100% certainty if it's tails. So by Bayes' theorem you don't change anything and it's still 50%.
P(heads|awake) = P(awake|heads) * P(heads)/P(awake) = 1*.5/1 = .5 |
Re: Sleeping Beauty Problem
That's one interpretation. The different answers seem to stem from the two different schools of anthropic probability, ie the Self-Indication Assumption and the Self-Sampling Assumption. I can see the argument from both sides.
You are awake with no memory, but you know the details of the experiment, that you will be woken twice after a tails toss and once after heads. Or, let's say, you will be woken 100,000 times after a tails toss, and once after heads. Seems like any given time you're awoken, it was more likely to be after tails was tossed. I'm starting to think it's more an illusion from the sleeping person's perspective. Maybe solidly in the 50/50 camp now. |
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Philolsophers can **** anything up. SIA as presented in wiki is an obviously ******ed misapplication of the indifference principle.
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It doesn't seem that interesting to me. It's just a difference between whether you count each interview as one interview, or if you throw in a weighting factor based on the frequency with which such the question would be asked.
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The way I understand it I side with the P = 1/3 argument.
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Also, the doomsday argument seems demonstrably lolbad for the same reason. Assuming you're just dealing with total births, and not any function of people alive at a given time or anything, whatever your ratio of P(100b)/P(90b) is in your prior will be the same after 60b are observed born. Again by Bayes' theorem,
P(100b|>=60b)=P(>=60b|100b)*P(100b)/P(>=60b) = 1*P(100b)/P(>=60b) = P(100b)/P(>=60b), and same for P(90b), so the ratio is now P(100b)/P(>=60b) / P(90b)/P(>=60b) = P(100b)/P(90b) still. It's obviously uninformative to the ratio. And you can't even assign a uniform prior on N to even come up with an estimate, so it has to be something totally pulled out of your ass. |
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50%
there's a 50% chance this is her first awakening, or a 50% chance it's her x awakening. |
Re: Sleeping Beauty Problem
From her perspective when she wakes up:
In other words, the premise of the ⅔ – ⅓ argument, that there are three possible states — each equally likely — from her perspective when she wakes up, is false, and results derived therefrom also false. There are three states, but she knows darned well that they aren't equally likely. |
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I declare that my intention is to always guess heads. You flip a coin and ask me. I clearly win half of these bets. Now, if and only if it's tails, you keep asking me to guess the result of *the same flip*, and I keep saying heads because that's how I roll. If there's money on the line each time, I obviously lose my ass, because the bets aren't independent. P(win first guess) = .5, but P(win 2nd guess | lost first guess)=0. Other than naive intuition, why would you expect the second bet to be breakeven? The mere act of being asked to make the bet means I'll lose it every time. |
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In your situation, you have a 100% chance of making the first guess and a 50% chance of making the second guess. Also you have a 50% chance of winning the first guess and a 0% chance of winning the second guess. Your expected number of guesses is 1.5, and your expected number of wins is 0.5. Your expected number of wins per guess is therefore 1/3.
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If she always answers tails she will be right a larger proportion of the time than if she always answers heads. As far as I understand probability that's means that P(heads)<P(tails) by definition...
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Re: Sleeping Beauty Problem
No.. that means P(being correct answering tails|asked the question)>P(being correct answering heads|asked the question). It's fallacious to conflate this with believing P(tails)>P(heads).
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What is the difference between P(being correct answering tails|asked the question) and P(tails|asked the question)
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Ok I think I understand the problem a little better. I think the overriding fact is that being awakened doesn't give us any new information. We knew beforehand that we were going to be awakened. Everything we know about the current situation is exactly the same as what we knew before we were put to sleep. To us, the coinflip may as well not even have happened yet. So the correct answer is 50%.
The gambling analogy is flawed because the number of times you place the bet is dependent on the outcome of the bet. In that kind of situation, EV equations don't work the same way. |
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Nick Bostrom on Sleeping Beauty Bostrom differentiates between possible agent parts and actual agent parts. The idea being that in one trial of the experiment Sleeping Beauty will experience either exactly 1 or exactly 2 actual agent parts. Either 1 corresponding to heads or 2 corresponding to tails. While in a large number of trials She will experience aproximately twice as many actual agent parts corresponding to tails as corresponding to heads. He then claims Her credence for heads should be different in the two cases - 1 trial or many. I'm afraid it's a tough sell but who knows. imo, jason1990 clarifies things nicely in his last post. For the 1/2's the problem comes with what Sleeping Beauty should think if she is awakened and informed the coin was tails. What should her credence be that the day is Monday? I believe the Indifference Principle is required for her to have credence 1/2. But there's no proof of that. Just an arbitrary appeal to a principle that may not apply. Jason1990 rejects that appeal to indifference. However his innovation (imo) is to not try to argue another value for what her credence should be in that case. Instead, he claims there is not enough information for Her to form any rational credence other than it must be either Monday or Tuesday. With that allowed, all the other credences conform to intuition without being contradictory. So I think jason1990's summary is probably the best that can be done unless you want to intoduce Sleeping Beauty to Alice in Wonderland and take her down Nick Bostrom's probability rabbit hole of possible and actual agent parts. PairTheBoard |
Re: Sleeping Beauty Problem
If you wake up and they ask you what is the chance it was tails then the answer will depend on what day it is.
If it was Monday then it could be either heads or tails 50-50. If it was Tuesday it could only be tails. So P(tails)= P(tails given its Monday)*P(being Monday)+P(tails given its Tuesday)*P(being Tuesday) Now on a random day you wake up it can be either Monday or Tuesday. However out of all possible wake ups that can exist we have expected results after N trials of N/2 Mondays with heads and N/2 Mondays with tails that will be followed by N/2 Tuesdays. For N trials you have 3/2*N wake ups and N occur on Mondays and N/2 of Tuesdays. Which means if you are woken up the chance its Monday is 2/3 and Tuesday 1/3. Going back to our equation since P(tails given its Monday)=1/2 and P(tails given its Tuesday)=1 P(tails)= P(tails given its Monday)*P(being Monday)+P(tails given its Tuesday)*P(being Tuesday) = 1/2*2/3+1*1/3=1/3+1/3=2/3 Similarly P(heads)=P(heads given its Monday)*P(being Monday)+P(heads given its Tuesday)*P(being Tuesday) = 1/2*2/3+0*1/3=1/3 So once you wake up if asked the question what is the chance it was tails the answer ought to be 2/3 and for heads 1/3. There is absolutely nothing wrong with these numbers. Why isnt that the right answer? And where is the paradox? All that was calculated here was what is the chance it was heads or tails given that we woke up and asked that question. This is very different than calculating what is the chance it was rolled heads or tails when you ask this question to an independent observer who is not subjected to memory loss games. As i believe already suggested why not repeat the memory loss pill a billion times for tails. You end up waking up so many times when its tails. Dont you reasonably expect that so many times you were asked this question it was because of tails typically??? Where is the problem in all this? |
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Notice also that if you never told the beauty that there was a pill involved to make her forget , just that she would sleep and wake up and asked a question , her answer would be 1/2 always. However it would be also wrong. She would be imagining its always Monday when it can be any future day as well (depending on how many pills used). There is nothing wrong with that mistake she now makes. But we know better!
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