Poker Is Skill, Say Scientists
Tuesday, 1 April 2008
A recent article in online magazine Science Daily has taken the
results from two studies and announced skill is more important than
luck when it comes to being a successful poker player.
A recent article in online magazine Science Daily has taken the
results from two studies and announced skill is more important than
luck when it comes to being a successful poker player.
The magazine quotes Michael DeDonno, a doctoral student from
Cleveland’s Case Western Reserve University, who carried out two
poker-related studies with students that found skill winning out
over luck.
'This article provides empirical evidence that it is skill and
not luck,' said DeDonno.
In the first study, DeDonno had 41 university students play
eight games totalling 200 hands of turbo Texas Hold'em, a
computerised simulation of ten-player hold'em poker. DeDonno stated
that most of the students had little experience playing poker but
half of the students were given charts ranking two-card
combinations from best to the worst and were told that professional
poker players typically play only about 15 percent of the hands
they are dealt.
The other half was given background on the history of poker but
with no strategies and did not fare as well as the group who were
given strategies. Before starting the study, 64 percent of the
students stated that winning at poker was 50 percent luck.
'If it had been pure luck in winning, then the strategies would
not have made a difference for the two groups,' said DeDonno.
To statistically verify the results, DeDonno conducted a second
study with students playing 720 hands. Again the group was divided
and while all students improved their playing with practice, it was
the section given strategies that continued to do better.
DeDonno stated that students also reduced the average number of
hands they played from 27 at the beginning to 15 after they were
given strategies, which improved their games and validated that
‘fewer hands does result in improved performance’.