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Theoretical Paper

On the development of decision rules for bar quiz handicapping

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Pages 1406-1414 | Received 01 Nov 2006, Accepted 01 Jun 2007, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Some competitions involve teams comprising different numbers of players. For informal games, such as the popular ‘pub quiz’, we argue that teams with fewer players are at a disadvantage. This paper investigates the properties of these games and develops several methods for allocating handicaps within such competitions, so that the competitions may be considered fair, based on a simple Bernoulli model for correctly answering questions and assuming exchangeability of participants. We recommend a natural conjugate prior subjective handicapping rule; with this rule handicaps may be set beforehand given the judgement of the quiz setter regarding the difficulty of the questions. We also describe a posterior rule that provides improved accuracy but is calculated after the quiz is complete. Finally, the paper considers modifications of the proposed rules to cope with multiple-choice questions and progressive quizzes.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank the bar quiz organiser, Ed Rochead (DSTL), team-mates and opponents at OR48 for inspiring this research.

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