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Prof. Robert Scott standing on porch of Great Hall, wearing suit and tie

Prof. Scott Discusses Research on Gaming Probabilities

Robert H. Scott III, Ph.D. professor in the Department of Economics, Finance, and Real Estate and Arthur and Dorothy Greenbaum/Robert Ferguson/NJAR Endowed Chair in Real Estate Policy, was recently interviewed by Color Up, a media company dedicated to the dice game of craps. In the video, “Building a Machine to Study Dice Control,” Scott discusses strategies and validity behind throwing a die to achieve a particular outcome.

The discussion is based on Scott’s previous research on the topic, “Golden Arm: A Probabilistic Study of Dice Control in Craps” (UNLV Gaming Research & Review Journal, Vol. 22, Iss. 1, 2018) and “Pair-a-Dice Lost: Experiments in Dice Control” (UNLV Gaming Research & Review Journal, Vol. 24, Iss. 1, 2020). “Golden Arm” calculates how much control a craps shooter must possess on dice outcomes to eliminate the house advantage, while “Pair-a-Dice Lost” tests whether a custom-made dice throwing machine applying common dice control methods could produce dice rolls that differ from random.

Watch the full interview.