Zangeeph wrote:In that particular instance when it went to 3 flips, yes my $EV was $1.50. But in many tournaments my $EV would be just $0.50.
Your $EV IF it went to 3 flips is $2.50, not $1.50. By assuming it goes to 3 flips, it implies you only look at the subpopulation that has HHx, and obviously you then have 50% to win $2 and 50% to win $3.
Zangeeph wrote:I just realized I counted these incorrectly. The correct calculation is:
In HHH my $EV is $1.5, HHT my $EV is $1.5, HT my $EV is $1 and T my $EV is $0.5.
This is because my EV is increased by $0.5 according to how many flips I do. This means my EV is 125*$1.5+125*$1.5+250*$1+500*$0.5=$875. So my net won per game is -$0.125.
Interesting way of computing the $EV. Normally, $EV of a game is simply the sum of probability*outcome or 0.5*0 + 0.25*1 + 0.125*2 + 0.125*3 = $0.875. I'm still wondering why both calculations lead to the same result. I believe you're trying to prove here that by entering the HEM $EV values in your formula, you come to the correct conclusion.
Zangeeph wrote:Now do you understand why I am correct?
No.
What I still don't see is how apparently the actual outcome of the game (i.e. one particular sample) can change the $EV of the game as a whole. E.g. in this same game, suppose you immediately tossed Tails and won $0. Then according to you (or HEM) the $EV of this game is $0.5. But this doesn't make sense to me, because it completely ignores the possible winnings of future winnings if I had tossed Heads first.
You stated earlier that my mistake is that I overweigh earlier decisions/branches and that order should not be important. My belief is actually that you/HEM make the mistake of modifying the weight of later possible outcomes by a) overvaluating them when they actually occurred, or b) ignoring them completely when an earlier outcome caused it never to happen.
The $EV of the game as a whole should be a constant, regardless of what your actual outcome is when playing 1 sample of the game.
What I'm really interested in by comparing my result with the $EV is whether I ran below or above expectation (like you say, this is essential in hyper HU SNGs) of the game as a whole. Now, suppose you run the above game 100 times and for some reason it comes up 100 times HT, so you win 100x $1. Now, according to HEM the $EV will also be $100 so I'm running right at $EV. THe reality however is that I was running hot, because the $EV of the game is $0.875 and on average I would win $87.5, not $100 !!!