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Ubaldo Andrea Farina wrote:Hi Norm,
interesting study. Is it possible to have this large collection of games?
Thanks.
Ubaldo Andrea
Norm Pollock wrote:
White has on average a 4 point elo advantage over all games. Considering the data is close to 200,000 games, this is a very large and surprising advantage. Tournament directors favor the better player by giving him white more often. What is the justice in that?
Norm Pollock wrote:
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I think there is a need to go to dual elos to accurately reflect a players strength since the same player could be quite stronger as white.
Norm Pollock wrote:
There seems to be a big paradox. The elo difference between white and black is only 4 elo points in favor of white. Yet White scores 55.8% to Black's 44.2%. I don't have the elo table conversion (where can I find one) so let me assume that the results indicate a difference of approximately 50 elo points. Shouldn't a difference of only 4 elo points result in something like 50.5% to 49.5% instead of 55.8% to 44.2%
Pallav Nawani wrote:Norm Pollock wrote:
There seems to be a big paradox. The elo difference between white and black is only 4 elo points in favor of white. Yet White scores 55.8% to Black's 44.2%. I don't have the elo table conversion (where can I find one) so let me assume that the results indicate a difference of approximately 50 elo points. Shouldn't a difference of only 4 elo points result in something like 50.5% to 49.5% instead of 55.8% to 44.2%
White player moves first. That is an advantage. Master opinion is that right to move is an advantage nearly equal to 1/3 of a pawn (perhaps 40-50 ELO). That would explain this apparant paradox quite well.
Pallav
Claude Le Page wrote:Hi Norm!
Now , how do you explain that some players have a ratio
White Wins / Black Wins far bigger than 55/45 , and others , like me , score more Black wins than white ones?
And all that is combined in overall statistics!
Statistics are not so simple!
Claude Le Page wrote:Hi Norm!
Now , how do you explain that some players have a ratio
White Wins / Black Wins far bigger than 55/45 , and others , like me , score more Black wins than white ones?
And all that is combined in overall statistics!
Statistics are not so simple!
Claude Le Page wrote:Hi Norm!
Long ago , probability and Statistics were a fair part of my profession ;
As I was interested in Psychometrics , I had occasion to think about the problems of "human statistics"
Roughly , Chess statistics are composed of 2 parts :
First is relative to objective strength of players , such as answers to a battery of test positions : it obeys to probability laws exactly as physical phenomena
Second is related to human decision , and I doubt whether they are "probabilisable" : just a simple example :
I am correspondence player ; at the beginning of a tournament , I can't guess what will be the first move of my opponents , and they were unable to guess mines : it's a decision
As for me , in some tounaments , I decided to open all my games with 1 e4 , but in others I varied my first move between e4,d4,Nf3 , c4 or g3
You surely agree that choice of the first moves has an influence on the outcome of games
As for me , I played almost exclusively with Black Open Ruy Lopez on e4,
and KID on anything else : on both I had become an expert , so I scored
heavily with Black
Others have a wide repertoire and don't score so well with Black
Then you may observe that this ratio White wins/Black wins vary with time , and with level of tournaments
150 years ago there were very few Black wins , chiefly in king's gambit , but now it's almost abandoned ,as too favourable to Black
You see , it's not so simple
Claude Le Page wrote:Hi Norm!
I don't discuss the care and the serious of your study , but you neglect psychological factors that for me are more important than the advantage of move
Many players , chiefly OTB , have a "complex" when they have Black :
they are content to draw or , if they need to win , they embark on risky lines
As I told you , these factors are difficult to compute in terms of probabiliy , but I think they are most important
I have made thematic tournaments between engines , starting with positions held as slightly favourable to White , as the McKenzie variation
(Smyslov-Reshevsky of cable match 1950 ) : OTB it's favourable to White , but between engines Black has an edge
In the same way ratio W/B is nearer from 50/50 in postal games , because it's possible to find in Chess books or databases an equalizing line
As I told you King's Gambit or Evans Gambit don't score as heavily for White as in past time , but Black continue to choose lines difficult to crack , but with which it's more difficult to win : e-g closed defences of Ruy Lopez
Conversely , when I play with Black a KID or a Dilworth , I am confident ,
and so I score more than 50%
Norm Pollock wrote:The study concluded that an average player in this population, who has played an equal number of games with white as with black, has a black elo 18 elo points less than his full elo, and has a white elo 18 elo points greater than his full elo.
Another way to look at a player's full elo is to think of it as the weighted average of the player's white and black elos.
Example: Suppose a player plays 1000 games as white and has a white elo of 2400. The same player plays 1500 games as black and has a black elo of 2200. The weighted average is
= (1000*2400 + 1500*2200)/(1000+1500) = 2280
This player has a white elo (2400) 120 points above his full elo (2280), and a black elo (2200) 80 below his full elo.
Sven Sch?le wrote:Norm Pollock wrote:The study concluded that an average player in this population, who has played an equal number of games with white as with black, has a black elo 18 elo points less than his full elo, and has a white elo 18 elo points greater than his full elo.
Another way to look at a player's full elo is to think of it as the weighted average of the player's white and black elos.
Example: Suppose a player plays 1000 games as white and has a white elo of 2400. The same player plays 1500 games as black and has a black elo of 2200. The weighted average is
= (1000*2400 + 1500*2200)/(1000+1500) = 2280
This player has a white elo (2400) 120 points above his full elo (2280), and a black elo (2200) 80 below his full elo.
Hi Norm,
I believe there is kind of a formal error in your way of separating "white elo" and "black elo". If it were possible to have such a rating system then you would not be able to compare these ratings, for the following reason:
a) You cannot compare a "white elo" to a "black elo", for obvious reasons.
b) You cannot compare any "white elos" among each other because there are no games where both players have white. The same applies for "black elos".
All "white elos" would have to be derived from games of players having white against other players having black. But which elo of such a black opponent to take for calculation of a new white elo? I think it is simply impossible, it hurts the whole rating system.
Just my two cents!
Sven
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