ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker Real Poker: Around 2.6...

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ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS

Transcript of ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker Real Poker: Around 2.6...

Page 1: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS

Page 2: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Comparison with Real Poker

Real Poker: Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card

stud Hands somewhat independent for Texas

Hold ‘em

Let’s assume probability of hands comes from a uniform distribution in [0,1]

Assume probabilities are independent

Page 3: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

The Poker Models

La Relance Rules: Each player puts in 1 ante before seeing his

number Each player then sees his/her number Player 1 chooses to bet B/fold Player 2 chooses to call/fold Whoever has the largest number wins.

von Neumann Rules: Player 1 chooses to bet B/check

immediately Everything else same as La Relance

Page 4: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

The Poker Models

http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~mky7b/cs6501poker/rng.html

Page 5: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

Who has the edge, P1 or P2? Why? Betting tree:

Page 6: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

The optimal strategy and value of the game: Consider the optimal strategy for player 2

first. It’s no reason for player 2 to bluff/slow roll.

Assume the optimal strategy for player 2 is: Bet when Y>c Fold when Y<c

Nash’s Equilibrium

Page 7: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

P2 should choose appropriate c so that P1’s decision does not affect P2:

If PI has some hand X<c, the decision he makes should not affect the game’s outcome. Suppose PI bets B

P1 wins 1 if P2 has Y<c (since he folds ‘optimally’) P1 loses B+1 if P2 has Y>c (since he calls ‘optimally’)

Suppose P1 folds P1 wins -1

Which yields:

Page 8: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

We knew the optimal strategy for P2 is to always bet when Y>c. Assume the optimal strategy for player I is: Bet when X>c (No reason to fold when X>c

since P2 always folds when Y<c) Bet with a certain probability p when X<c (Bluff)

Now PI should choose p so that P2’s decision is indifferent:

Using Bayes’ theorem:

Page 9: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

Consider P2’s Decision at Y=c: If P2 calls with Y=c, he/she wins pot if X<c

and loses if X>c:

If P2 folds, Value for P2 is -1. Solve the equation:

We get:

Page 10: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

Now we can compute the value of the game as we did in AKQ game:

Result shows the game favors P2.

Page 11: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

When to bluff if P1 gets a number X<c? Intuitively, P1 bluffs with c2<X<c, (best

hand not betting), bets with X>c and folds with X<c2.

Why? If P2 is playing with the optimal strategy, how

to choose when to bluff is not relevant. This penalizes when P2 is not following the

optimal strategy.

Page 12: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

What if player / opponent is suboptimal?

Assumed Strategy player 1 should always bet if X > m, fold

otherwise player 2 should always call if Y > n, fold

otherwise, Also call if n > m is known (why?) Assume decisions are not random

beyond cards dealt Alternate Derivations Follow

Page 13: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance

Page 14: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance (Player 2 strategy)

Page 15: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance (Player 2 strategy)

What can you infer from the properties of this function?

What if m ≈ 0? What if m ≈ 1?

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La Relance (Player 1 response)

Player 1 does not have a good response strategy (why?)

Page 17: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance (Player 1 Strategy) Let’s assume player 2 doesn’t always

bet when n > m

This function is always increasing, is zero at n = β / (β + 2) What should player 1 do?

Page 18: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance (Player 1 Strategy)

If n is large enough, P1 should always bet (why?)

If n is small however, bet when m >

What if n = β / (β + 2) exactly?

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Von Neumann

Betting tree:

Page 20: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann

Page 21: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann

Since P1 can check, now he gets positive value out of the game P1 now bluff with the worst hand. Why?

On the bluff part, it’s irrelevant to choose which section of (0,a) to use if P2 calls (P2 calls only when Y>c)

On the check part, it’s relevant because results are compared right away.

Page 22: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann

Nash’s equilibrium: Three key points:

P1’s view: P2 should be indifferent between folding/calling with a hand of Y=c

P2’s view: P1 should be indifferent between checking and betting with X=a

P2’s view: P1 should be indifferent between checking and betting with X=b

Page 23: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann

What if player / opponent is suboptimal?

Assumed Strategy Player 1 Bet if X < a or X > b, Check

otherwise Player 2 Call if Y > c, fold otherwise If c is known, Player 1 wants to keep a < c

and b > c

Page 24: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann

Page 25: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann

Page 26: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann (Player 1 Strategy)

Find the maximum of the payoff function

a =

b =

What can we conclude here?

Page 27: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann (Player 2 Response)

Player 2 does not have a good response strategy

Page 28: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann (Player 2 Strategy)

This analysis is very similar to Borel Poker’s player 1 strategy, won’t go in depth here…

c =

Page 29: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Bellman & Blackwell

Bet tree

Where

Borel: B1= B2

Von Neumann: B1= 0

Page 30: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Bellman & Blackwell

Fold Low B High B High BLow B

mL mH b1 b3

b2

Page 31: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Bellman & Blackwell

Where

Or

if

Page 32: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance: Non-identical Distribution

Still follows the similar pattern

Where F and G are distributions of P1 and P2, c is still the threshold point for P2. π is still the probability that P1 bets when he has X<c.

What if?

Page 33: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance:(negative) Dependent hands

X and Y conforms to FGM distribution

Marginal distributions are still uniform. is correlation factor. means negative

correlation.

Page 34: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

La Relance:(negative) Dependent hands

Player 1 bets when X > l P(Y < c | X = l) = B / (B + 2)

Player 2 bets when Y > c (2*B + 2)*P(X > c|Y = c) = (B + 2)*P(X > l|Y =

c)

Game Value: P(X > Y) – P(Y < X) + B * [ P(c < Y < X) – P(l < X < Y AND Y > c) ] + 2 * [ P(X < Y < c AND X > l) – P(Y < X < l) ]

Page 35: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann:Non-identical Distribution

Also similar to before (just substitute the distribution functions) a | (B + 2) * G(c) = 2 * G(a) + B b | 2 * G(b) = G(c) + 1 c | (B + 2) * F(a) = B * (1 – F(b))

Page 36: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Von Neumann:(negative) Dependent hands

Player 2 Optimal Strategy:

Player 1 Optimal Strategy:

Page 37: ON THE BOREL AND VON NEUMANN POKER MODELS. Comparison with Real Poker  Real Poker:  Around 2.6 million possible hands for 5 card stud  Hands somewhat.

Discussion / Thoughts / Questions Is this a good model for poker?