The Perfect Bet: How Science and Math Are Taking the Luck Out of Gambling
Bringing together ideas from mathematics, psychology, economics and physics, The Perfect Bet traces the origins of successful betting methods. From the simple to the intricate, and the audacious to the absurd, Adam Kucharski reveals the long and tangled history between betting and science, and explains why gambling continues to generate insights into luck and decision-making today. Covering exploits and ideas from across the globe, he meets the teams behind hedge funds that capitalize on inaccurate sports betting odds, and explains how PhD-level pundits are using methods originally developed for the U. S. nuclear program to predict sports results. Kucharski reveals why winning at chess depends on luck-but victory in checkers does not-and why poker is one of the ultimate challenges for artificial intelligence. He also explores the difficulties of mimicking human behavior, and explains what caused one hedge fund's rogue algorithm to lose them $400,000 per second in the summer of 2012.
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The Perfect Bet: How Science and Math Are Taking the Luck Out of Gambling
Bringing together ideas from mathematics, psychology, economics and physics, The Perfect Bet traces the origins of successful betting methods. From the simple to the intricate, and the audacious to the absurd, Adam Kucharski reveals the long and tangled history between betting and science, and explains why gambling continues to generate insights into luck and decision-making today. Covering exploits and ideas from across the globe, he meets the teams behind hedge funds that capitalize on inaccurate sports betting odds, and explains how PhD-level pundits are using methods originally developed for the U. S. nuclear program to predict sports results. Kucharski reveals why winning at chess depends on luck-but victory in checkers does not-and why poker is one of the ultimate challenges for artificial intelligence. He also explores the difficulties of mimicking human behavior, and explains what caused one hedge fund's rogue algorithm to lose them $400,000 per second in the summer of 2012.
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The Perfect Bet: How Science and Math Are Taking the Luck Out of Gambling

The Perfect Bet: How Science and Math Are Taking the Luck Out of Gambling

by Adam Kucharski

Narrated by Jonathan Yen

Unabridged — 8 hours, 34 minutes

The Perfect Bet: How Science and Math Are Taking the Luck Out of Gambling

The Perfect Bet: How Science and Math Are Taking the Luck Out of Gambling

by Adam Kucharski

Narrated by Jonathan Yen

Unabridged — 8 hours, 34 minutes

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Overview

Bringing together ideas from mathematics, psychology, economics and physics, The Perfect Bet traces the origins of successful betting methods. From the simple to the intricate, and the audacious to the absurd, Adam Kucharski reveals the long and tangled history between betting and science, and explains why gambling continues to generate insights into luck and decision-making today. Covering exploits and ideas from across the globe, he meets the teams behind hedge funds that capitalize on inaccurate sports betting odds, and explains how PhD-level pundits are using methods originally developed for the U. S. nuclear program to predict sports results. Kucharski reveals why winning at chess depends on luck-but victory in checkers does not-and why poker is one of the ultimate challenges for artificial intelligence. He also explores the difficulties of mimicking human behavior, and explains what caused one hedge fund's rogue algorithm to lose them $400,000 per second in the summer of 2012.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"An elegant and amusing account... Anyone planning to enter a casino or place an online bet would be advised to keep this book handy."—Wall Street Journal

"This book is full of magic. It's brimming with clever people and clever ideas."—New Scientist

"Beautifully written, solidly researched, and full of surprises."—New York Times' Numberplay blog

"Brilliant new book."—CardsChat

Kirkus Reviews

2015-12-08
A lucid yet sophisticated look at the mathematics of probability as it's played out on gaming tables, arenas, and fields. Scissors cut paper, rock smashes scissors, paper covers rock: we all know the game, and some of us have a sense of when to play which of the three choices. Game theory, writes Kucharski (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine), would hold that the optimal strategy is simply to choose randomly, by which you would come out even in the long term. However, most of us are more predictable than that: if we win with rock over scissors, then we'll choose rock next time. We may shift our strategies, but we're not playing randomly—and in any event, Kucharski observes, "the irony is that even truly random sequences can contain seemingly nonrandom patterns." Sure, card counting works to some extent, but most mathematical behavior is a kind of learned guesswork and a lot of hunch playing. The author doesn't reveal secrets of winning so much as he looks at the myriad ways the math is working against us. "Finding a biased roulette wheel," he notes by way of example, "isn't the same as finding a profitable one," but even so, finding a roulette wheel that "churns out numbers that are uniformly distributed" generally requires collecting a vast body of information about that wheel, something that computers are better at doing than people. The same is true at the parimutuel racetrack, the boxing ring, and every other venue for wagering: having sufficient information is key to making any sort of bet that isn't a mere stab in the dark. Even the most seasoned of bettors is thus usually to be found somewhere along what mathematicians call Poincaré's third level of ignorance. Kucharski's book, which necessarily oversimplifies an extremely complex subject, is no cure for that ignorance, but gamblers and math buffs alike will enjoy it for its smart approach to real-world problems.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170127016
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 02/23/2016
Edition description: Unabridged
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