MaxHayden, on 2019-August-31, 01:53, said:
Have we gone any further in this regard?
My conclusion from back then was that we were approaching the problem incorectly. Instead of evaluating a single hand additively,we needed to evaluate the hands as a combination and treat constructive bidding as variance reduction. This seemed to give results that made sense --the difference between your longest combined suit and the shortest combined suit is the biggest impact -- so trumps and splinters. Then controls and etc., just like normal bidding except we could probably improve some corner cases.
I'd have liked to teach TSP to help beginnes get some better guidance starting out, but that it really only worked well for suit contacts meaning you'd have to teach normal HCP for NT and build a bidding system that accommodated this. Plus there was no easy way to convert TSP to HCP in your head. So BUMRAP+531 it was and the other TSP adjustments had to be learned as judgement calls. Plus there wasn't a straight forward way to calculate BUMRAP without some elaborate rule or lots of fractions: e.g. As adjustments for card combinations.
But there is a book from MasterPoints honors series about optimal hand evaluation. Is it any good?
Has there been any further work on this topic?
I wanted to follow up on this.
Lawrence Diamond's _Mastering Hand Evaluation_ references and summarizes much of what has been written in English. It would be a good reference for someone who was doing research or someone who wanted an overview.
But Patrick Darricades' books are more interesting. He didn't do any original research, his goal was simply to summarize the state of the art based on what had already been written. He starts with the entire corpus of statistical work done by J-R. Vernes (including his 1995 book) and adds in more recent findings with a coherent set of point values so that you have an actual system instead of a list of considerations. Importantly, the focus is on adjusting your valuation to incorporate new information you get from your partner and to guide you bidding decisions about what information would be most helpful.
He has two versions: the Honor's Book _Optimal Hand Evaluation_ and a book from Tellwell, _Optimal Evaluation of Bridge Hands_. I bought both of them. The Honors book is an edited down more focused version of the Tellwell one. It's easier to follow if you are trying to *use* the method. But the Tellwell one made it easier to understand how he arrived at it, though I can't point to anything in the extra 50 pages of material that really stands out.
He hand-checked the method using about 7000 contracts over the period of 2 years. He says that a 50% odds contract will have at least the right point-value 95% of the time and one that have poorer odds will be below that threshold 95% of the time. The errors tend to be within 1-2 points. Typically you'll be 2 points high because of not knowing exact honor placement and having 1-2 points of wasted honors that weren't accounted for. Or you'll be be about 1 point too low because you had multiple deductions for lacking kings, queens, having mirror suits, and having 4333. The rounding errors accumulate in extreme cases and you subtract too much.
Since his results were by hand, I would love to rerun the numbers like we did for BUMRAP and TSP above so that we could put everything on the same footing and get an apples-to-apples comparison. Does anyone know if you can still access Tysen2k's databases and easily run the numbers like he did?
There are two benefits of Darricades' approach that I didn't really appreciate until I tried it. First, being based on the normal 4321 scale really does make it easier to deal with despite having to track half-points. Second, because it is a 6-increment scale instead of the 5 for Zar or TSP, you always have a good or bad intermediate and never a straight middle value.
The need for editing and computer statistics aside, there are only two things I'd want to add.
First, a better way to teach people to use the count. He has a few ways to explain the pieces in ways that avoid memorization, but I'd have liked a comprehensive presentation that helped people learn how to do this quickly at the table.
Second, when you use just HCP, it's very easy to figure out what opponents have based on what you have. But once you start adjusting for various factors, that becomes harder. I'd like something systematic that shows you how to make these inferences. (You could figure it out from his point value table, but it would be painful. So it should have been part of the book.)
If anyone looks into this work further, please let me know. I've been a big advocate of teaching advanced hand evaluation for a while and I think that Darricades' book is a huge step in the right direction. I think we can go further, but I'm glad that someone took the time to sit down and put what we already know in one place for easy reference.