

Excerpted from The American Statistician, August 1975, Vol. 29, No. 3
On the Mony Hall Problem
I have received a number of letters commenting on my "Letters to the
Editor" in The American Statistician of February, 1975, entitled "A
Problem in Probability." Several correspondents claim my answer is
incorrect. The basis to my solution is that Monty Hall knows which box
contains the keys and when he can open either of two boxes without exposing
the keys, he chooses between them at random. An alternative solution to
enumerating the mutually exclusive and equally likely outcomes is as follows:
A = event that keys are contained in box B
B = event that contestant chooses box B
C = event that Monty Hall opens box A
Then
P(keys in box B | contestant selects B and Monty opens A)
| = P(A | BC) |
= P(ABC)/P(BC)
=P(C | AB)P(AB)/P(C | B)P(B)
=P(C | AB)P(B | A)P(A)/P(C | B)P(B)
=(1/2)(1/3)(1/3)(1/2)(1/3)
1/3 |
If the contestant trades his box B for the unopened box on the table, his
probability of winning the card is 2/3.
D.L. Ferguson presented a generalization of this problem for the case of n
boxes, in which Monty Hall opens p boxes. In this situation, the
probability the contestant wins when he switches boxes is (n-1)/[n(n-p-1)].
Benjamin King pointed out the critical assumpitons about Monty Hall's
behavior that are necessary to solve the problem, and emphasized that "the
prior distribution is not the only part of the probabilistic side of a
decision problem that is subjective."
Monty Hall wrote and expressed that he was not "a student of statistics
problems" but "the big hole in your argument is that once the first box is
seen to be emprty, the contestant cannot exchange his box." He continues
to say, "Oh and incedentally, after one [box] is seen to be empty, his
chances are no longer 50/50 but remain what they were in the first place,
one out of three. It just seems to the contestant that one box having been
eliminated, he stands a better chance. Not so." I could not have said it
better myself.
Steve Selvin
School of Public Health
University of California
Berkley, CA
Monte's Posterior
A response to Steve Selvin's "A Problem in Probability"
Selvin's note solved an interesting problem concerning the well-known
TV show "Let's Make a Deal." However, his solution via an enumeration
approach is confirmed by a more straight-forward procedure as follows.
Consider the following events and probabilities:
P(A = Key box in hand) = 1/3
P(B = Key box on table) = 2/3
P(C = Monte opens empty box on table) = 1
Then, revising probabilities in the light on Monte's action yields:
Hence, the probability of the remaining unopened box on the table
containing the keys is 2/3, the contestant should switch.
Joseph G. Van Matre
School of Business
University of Alabama in Birmingham
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