On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 1:40 PM, Nick Wedd <mapr...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 22 March 2016 at 17:20, Álvaro Begué <alvaro.be...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> A very simple-minded analysis is that, if the null hypothesis is that
>> AlphaGo and Lee Sedol are equally strong, AlphaGo would do as well as we
>> observed or better 15.625% of the time. That's a p-value that even social
>> scientists don't get excited about. :)
>>
>>
> "For "as well ... or better", I make it 18.75%.
>

I obviously can't count. :)

Thanks for the correction.

Álvaro.




>
> Nick
>
>
>
>> Álvaro.
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 12:48 PM, Jason House <
>> jason.james.ho...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Statistical significance requires a null hypothesis... I think it's
>>> probably easiest to ask the question of if I assume an ELO difference of x,
>>> how likely it's a 4-1 result?
>>> Turns out that 220 to 270 ELO has a 41% chance of that result.
>>> >= 10% is -50 to 670 ELO
>>> >= 1% is -250 to 1190 ELO
>>> My numbers may be slightly off from eyeballing things in a simple excel
>>> sheet. The idea and ranges should be clear though
>>> On Mar 22, 2016 12:00 PM, "Lucas, Simon M" <s...@essex.ac.uk> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi all,
>>>>
>>>> I was discussing the results with a colleague outside
>>>> of the Game AI area the other day when he raised
>>>> the question (which applies to nearly all sporting events,
>>>> given the small sample size involved)
>>>> of statistical significance - suggesting that on another week
>>>> the result might have been 4-1 to Lee Sedol.
>>>>
>>>> I pointed out that in games of skill there's much more to judge than
>>>> just the final
>>>> outcome of each game, but wondered if anyone had any better (or worse :)
>>>> arguments - or had even engaged in the same type of
>>>> conversation.
>>>>
>>>> With AlphaGo winning 4 games to 1, from a simplistic
>>>> stats point of view (with the prior assumption of a fair
>>>> coin toss) you'd not be able to claim much statistical
>>>> significance, yet most (me included) believe that
>>>> AlphaGo is a genuinely better Go player than Lee Sedol.
>>>>
>>>> From a stats viewpoint you can use this approach:
>>>> http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/itprnn/book.pdf
>>>> (see section 3.2 on page 51)
>>>>
>>>> but given even priors it won't tell you much.
>>>>
>>>> Anyone know any good references for refuting this
>>>> type of argument - the fact is of course that a game of Go
>>>> is nothing like a coin toss.  Games of skill tend to base their
>>>> outcomes on the result of many (in the case of Go many hundreds of)
>>>> individual actions.
>>>>
>>>> Best wishes,
>>>>
>>>>   Simon
>>>>
>>>>
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>
> --
> Nick Wedd      mapr...@gmail.com
>
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