Dirt wrote:Shaun wrote:... we also remove games where it appears the book has given a decisive advantage.
Wow, that sounds like a bad idea. The more subjective decisions (bad book line) have to be made, the more chance there is for inadvertent bias. Can you really force yourself to examine the opening with the same skepticism when Scorpio loses to Rybka as when Rybka loses to Scorpio?
Shaun wrote:(My worry here is we may be throwing away too many game when trying to be safe

). ...
One is too many, I think.
Hello Shaun, intuitively I would say that you probably do this only with 1:0-1:0 and 0:1-0:1 results, two games with reversed colors where the opening seemed to have a big influence and were won by one color? And I suspect that the ½:½ - ½:½ results that also tie a match, are left alone?
That would leave all the 1:0-0:1, 0:1-1:0, 1:0-½:½, 0:1-½:½, ½:½-1:0, ½:½-0:1 results, where one of the engines wins the match. In other words, doing this will always favour the stronger engines as they win more matches.
Correction: and also the weakest engines as they lose more matches against the average opposition!
So intuitively I would say this is bad statistical practice unless you could somehow cull the dead draws in equal measure to the almost sure white or black wins...
Is this a correct conclusion, anyone?
At least personally I don't bother very much if a game result seems influenced by the opening; the influence is inevitable anyway, and you would also have to prune the games where the opening leads to almost dead draws (and this probably is harder to judge than sure white and black wins!) and do this in equal measure to compensate, and avoid bias.
Regards, Eelco
-A probably related philosophical question: what is a neutral opening book? What does that mean really? A book with completely random moves, is that neutral? Or a book with theoretically completely equal positions, is that a neutral book? -