An Example in which Stationary Strategies are not Adequate
Dubins, Lester E. ; Sudderth, William D.
Ann. Probab., Tome 3 (1975) no. 6, p. 722-725 / Harvested from Project Euclid
An example is given of a gambling problem such that, on the one hand, for every initial state, there is a strategy which brings one to the goal with arbitrarily high probability and, on the other hand, for some initial state, every stationary strategy reaches the goal with probability zero.
Publié le : 1975-08-14
Classification:  6000,  Gambling,  stationary strategies,  probability,  finite additivity,  dynamic programming,  control theory,  decision theory,  60G99,  62C05
@article{1176996312,
     author = {Dubins, Lester E. and Sudderth, William D.},
     title = {An Example in which Stationary Strategies are not Adequate},
     journal = {Ann. Probab.},
     volume = {3},
     number = {6},
     year = {1975},
     pages = { 722-725},
     language = {en},
     url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/1176996312}
}
Dubins, Lester E.; Sudderth, William D. An Example in which Stationary Strategies are not Adequate. Ann. Probab., Tome 3 (1975) no. 6, pp.  722-725. http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/1176996312/