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         Monty Hall Problem:     more books (16)
  1. The Monty Hall Problem: The Remarkable Story of Math's Most Contentious Brain Teaser by Jason Rosenhouse, 2009-06-04
  2. The Monty Hall Problem & Other Puzzles (Mastermind Collection) by Ivan Moscovich, 2004-11-01
  3. The Monty Hall Problem: Beyond Closed Doors by rob deaves, 2007-01-13
  4. The Monty Hall Problem and Other Puzzles (Mastermind) by Ivan Moscovich, 2005-02-11
  5. Decision Theory Paradoxes: Monty Hall Problem, St. Petersburg Paradox, Two Envelopes Problem, Parrondo's Paradox, Three Prisoners Problem
  6. Microeconomics: Monty Hall Problem
  7. THE MONTY HALL PROBLEM AND OTHER PUZZLES (MASTERMIND COLLECTION) by IVAN MOSCOVICH, 2005-01-01
  8. Monty Hall Problem: Monty Hall Problem. Let's Make a Deal, Monty Hall, Three Prisoners problem, Bertrand's box paradox, Quantum game theory, Deal or No Deal, Bayesian probability
  9. Ivan Moscovich's Mastermind Collection Four Book Set: Hinged Square, Monty Hall Problem, Leonardo's Mirror, The Shoelace Problem & Other Puzzles [4 Book Set] by Ivan Moscovich, 2004
  10. Mathematical Problems: Monty Hall Problem
  11. Let's Make a Deal: Monty Hall Problem, Wayne Brady, Billy Bush, Big Deal, Carol Merrill, Bob Hilton, Trato Hecho, Jonathan Mangum
  12. Probability Theory Paradoxes: Simpson's Paradox, Birthday Problem, Monty Hall Problem, St. Petersburg Paradox, Boy or Girl Paradox
  13. The Monty Hall Problem byRosenhouse by Rosenhouse, 2009
  14. Bayes' Theorem: Bayes' theorem, Bayesian inference, Monty Hall problem,Bayesian network, Bayesian spam filtering, Conjugate prior,Deism, Empirical ... method, Prosecutor's fallacy, Ravenparadox

101. The Monty Hall Page
Door 1 Door 2 Door 3. Behind one of these doors is a car. Behind the othertwo is a goat. Click on the door that you think the car is behind.
http://math.ucsd.edu/~crypto/Monty/monty.html
Behind one of these doors is a car.
Behind the other two is a goat.
Click on the door that you think the car is behind.
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102. Monty Hall, 3 Doors

http://www.shodor.org/interactivate/activities/monty3/
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103. Advanced Monty Hall

http://www.shodor.org/interactivate/activities/montynew/
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104. Monty Hall Simulation
Please be patient while the program loads. If part of it disappears while running,jiggle the window size. Close this window when you are done.
http://people.hofstra.edu/staff/steven_r_costenoble/MontyHall/MontyHallSim.html
Please be patient while the program loads. If part of it disappears while running, jiggle the window size. Close this window when you are done. Sorry, but you need a Java-enhanced browser to use this simulation.

105. NCTM : Illuminations Lessons : Monty's Dilemma: Should You Stick Or Switch?
Recently, a colleague in our department shared a version of this problem In monty s dilemma, the simulation step is absolutely crucial to enable our
http://illuminations.nctm.org/index_d.aspx?id=377

106. The Let's Make A Deal Applet
Despite a very clear explanation of this paradox, most students have a difficultyunderstanding the problem. It is very difficult to conquer the strong
http://www.stat.sc.edu/~west/javahtml/LetsMakeaDeal.html
The Let's Make a Deal Applet
As a motivating example behind the discussion of probability, an applet has been developed which allows students to investigate the Let's Make a Deal Paradox. This paradox is related to a popular television show in the 1970's. In the show, a contestant was given a choice of three doors of which one contained a prize. The other two doors contained gag gifts like a chicken or a donkey. After the contestant chose an initial door, the host of the show then revealed an empty door among the two unchosen doors, and asks the contestant if he or she would like to switch to the other unchosen door. The question is should the contestant switch. Do the odds of winning increase by switching to the remaining door? The intuition of most students tells them that each of the doors, the chosen door and the unchosen door, are equally likely to contain the prize so that there is a 50-50 chance of winning with either selection. This, however, is not the case. The probability of winning by using the switching technique is 2/3 while the odds of winning by not switching is 1/3. The easiest way to explain this to students is as follows. The probability of picking the wrong door in the initial stage of the game is 2/3. If the contestant picks the wrong door initially, the host must reveal the remaining empty door in the second stage of the game. Thus, if the contestant switches after picking the wrong door initially, the contestant will win the prize. The probability of winning by switching then reduces to the probability of picking the wrong door in the initial stage which is clearly 2/3.

107. The Chronicle: Page Not Found
We are unable to locate the page you requested. http//chronicle.com/0004/hypoextra.html. The page may have moved or may no longer be available.
http://www.linguafranca.com/0004/hypo-extra.html
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