A game-theoretic analysis of \textit{Baccara chemin de fer} (Q2351255): Difference between revisions

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Property / cites work: On Games that Involve Chance and the Skill of the Players / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Game-Theoretic Solution of Baccarat / rank
 
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Property / cites work: A computer technique for game-theoretic problems I: chemin-de-fer analyzed / rank
 
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Property / cites work: The Doctrine of Chances / rank
 
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Property / cites work: The Probability that a Random Game is Unfair / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 03:44, 18 December 2024

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A game-theoretic analysis of \textit{Baccara chemin de fer}
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    A game-theoretic analysis of \textit{Baccara chemin de fer} (English)
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    23 June 2015
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    Summary: Assuming that cards are dealt with replacement from a single deck and that each of Player and Banker sees the total of his own two-card hand but not its composition, \textit{baccara} is a \(2\times 2^{88}\) matrix game, which was solved by \textit{J. G. Kemeny} and \textit{J. L. Snell} [Am. Math. Mon. 64, 465--469 (1957; Zbl 0079.35203)]. Assuming that cards are dealt without replacement from a \(d\)-deck shoe and that Banker sees the composition of his own two-card hand while Player sees only his own total, \textit{baccara} is a \(2\times 2^{484}\) matrix game, which was solved by Downton and Lockwood in 1975 for \(d=1,2,\dots,8\). Assuming that cards are dealt without replacement from a \(d\)-deck shoe and that each of Player and Banker sees the composition of his own two-card hand, \textit{baccara} is a \(2^5\times 2^{484}\) matrix game, which is solved herein for every positive integer \(d\).
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    \textit{Baccara}
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    \textit{Chemin-de-fer}
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    sampling without replacement
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    matrix game
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    strict dominance
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    kernel
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    solution
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