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Estimathon Rules

The Estimathon is a team-based competition created by Andy Niedermayer where participants estimate quantities and submit their answers in the form of intervals. Teams have 18 total answers to distribute across 13 questions within a 40 minute period. Correct intervals that indicate the actual value score points based on their narrowness, while incorrect answers exponentially decrease the team's score. The team with the lowest score at the end wins.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
210 views2 pages

Estimathon Rules

The Estimathon is a team-based competition created by Andy Niedermayer where participants estimate quantities and submit their answers in the form of intervals. Teams have 18 total answers to distribute across 13 questions within a 40 minute period. Correct intervals that indicate the actual value score points based on their narrowness, while incorrect answers exponentially decrease the team's score. The team with the lowest score at the end wins.

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office
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Estimathon Rules and Instructions

About the Estimathon


The Estimathon is an event created by Andy Niedermayer, who you may recognize as also
being the author of FARML. Andy runs Estimathons at various conferences and events where
he recruits for Jane Street Capital. If you’re looking for summer internships in finance later in
your career, please consider contacting Andy and his Jane Street colleagues--folks with math
competition experience seem to have a good time there.

The Estimathon is a team competition. You will be placed, at random, in a team of


approximately 5-6 people. Each team should designate a team captain who will submit all of its
answers, and choose a team name.

Rules and Format


The Estimathon consists of 13 questions, each of which asks you to estimate some quantity.
For each question, submit answers in the form of a closed interval [a,b], where a and b are
positive real numbers. Your interval is correct if it contains the actual value, and incorrect
otherwise. Correct intervals that are narrow (i.e. b is close to a) will improve your score more
than correct intervals that are wide; see below for details.

Your team may submit up to 18 answers during the event. Answers will be scored immediately,
and you may submit answers to the same question more than once, either to correct an
incorrect interval, or to improve a correct interval. However, your latest submission for each
question is the only one that will count.

You may distribute your 18 answers however you want among the 13 questions. For example,
you can submit 18 answers for one question, and skip the rest, or you may submit two answers
each for 9 questions and skip the other 4. Any skipped questions will count as incorrect.

You will have approximately 40 minutes (subject to change depending on how long it takes to
get set up). Answers submitted near the end of the time limit may not be scored until after time
is called.

You may not use any internet or other sources during the event. ​Treat it like a math
competition. Also, calculators are not allowed.

Procedures
Your team will be assigned to a proctor, which will depend on your room number.​ ​To submit an
answer, one member of your team must return to the main room and send a private Zoom
message to your proctor in the chat containing (a) your breakout room number, (b) your team
name, if any, (c) the question number for which you are submitting an answer, and (d) the
interval you wish to submit.
All answers must be submitted in the form of a closed interval. The endpoints of the interval
must be integers or decimals in base 10. Any answers expressed in terms of pi, sqrt(2), or
similar will be marked incorrect. Scientific notation is acceptable.

Scores will be tracked live on a Google doc that you will have access to. A number entered
under a question indicates a correct answer, and the number is the score (see below) for the
interval submitted. An X indicates an incorrect answer.

Scoring
bn
The score for each correct interval [an , bn ] is the least integer greater than or equal to an −1.
That is, the score for the interval [5,50] is 9, and the scores for [5,6], [5,7], [5,8], [5,9], and [5,10]
are all 1. Lower scores are better.

Your team’s score will be computed by the following formula:


score = 2# of incorrect questions · (10 + ∑ (interval score))
correct intervals
That is, correct answers will raise your score linearly, depending on how wide your interval is.
Incorrect answers or skipped questions, however, will raise your score exponentially.

The lowest score wins. Andy’s usual advice at Estimathons is that the team that best
understands the scoring computation has the best chance of winning.

Link to scoring (will be updated approximately live):


https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1jPXvxPP9JNtNkd6VCk5oP9Uw6IlFkH9XvxdzRdD073
I/edit?usp=sharing

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