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Ulam's game

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(Redirected from Rényi–Ulam game) Mathematical guessing game For Ulam's topological game where players alternate choosing binary digits, see binary game.

Ulam's game, or the Rényi–Ulam game, is a mathematical game similar to the popular game of twenty questions. In Ulam's game, a player attempts to guess an unnamed object or number by asking yes–no questions of another, but one of the answers given may be a lie.

Alfréd Rényi (1961) introduced the game in a 1961 paper, based on Hungary's Bar Kokhba game, but the paper was overlooked for many years.

Stanisław Ulam rediscovered the game, presenting the idea that there are a million objects and the answer to one question can be wrong, and considered the minimum number of questions required, and the strategy that should be adopted. Pelc gave a survey of similar games and their relation to information theory.

See also

References

  1. "How to Play Ulam's Game" (PDF). Retrieved 13 June 2013.
  2. Ulam (1976), p. 281.
  3. Beluhov, Nikolai (2016). "Renyi-Ulam Games and Forbidden Substrings". arXiv:1609.07367 .
  4. Pelc (2002).


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