A Level Maths Notes: S1 – The Three Door Quiz Show Puzzle
The three door quiz show puzzle shows
how wrong intuition can be when dealing with probabilities. A
contestant in a game show may win a car by choosing which of three
doors the car is behind.
When you make your guess, the game
show host opens one of the two doors you did not choose, and there is
no car behind it. The host now gives you the opportunity to change
your mind and choose the other unopened door.
Do you change your guess or keep your
original choice?
Many people assume that the car is equally
likely to be behind either door and many stick to the door they have
chosen. This ignores the fact that there is a symmetry broken by the
host choosing from the other two doors which one to open.
When
you pick your door, before any door is opened, the probability that
you picked correctly is 1/3 and the probability that you chose
incorrectly is 2/3.
Now the host opens one of the other doors. He did not choose the
door you chose, just because you chose it. If he had picked from all
three doors which door to open to reveal no car, then the car could
equally likely have been behind the two remaining doors.
Suppose
the three doors are A, B and C, and suppose the contestant chose A,
then the host will choose B or C will equal probability.
The probability the contestant chose correctly is
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So whichever other door is opened, the probability that the
remaining door hides the car is![]()