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by FD3SA
4217 days ago
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None of these have any similarity to brainteasers. In fact, these are all excellent subjects on their own that could be tested directly. For example: "Give me an overview of a numerical method used to solve differential equations." The more time you spend asking brainteasers, the less time you have to devote to your actual skills of interest. You may even find that quizzing someone on mathematics may help refresh and solidify your own understanding. |
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Many candidates will answer this question correctly and yet be totally unable to do anything when they're confronted with a non textbook case. To be clear the brain teasers I ask are mathematical problems, not the type of brain teasers used in consulting interviews. For instance:
We play a game where we each draw a secret random number uniformly between 0 and 1. We each may re-throw if dissatisfied with our first throw, or me may keep it. We do not know whether or not the other has chosen to re-throw. We then compare our results and he who holds largest number wins $1. What is the best strategy to follow?
That's the type of brainteaser I'd ask. It's accessible to a good high school student. I interviewed a PhD candidate in applied mathematics from a top Ivy league university who:
- wouldn't believe that maximizing the expected value of the number obtained wasn't optimal until shown an explicit counterexample
- was unable to write the equations properly or model the problem
- was unable to solve the equations after I handed them out to them
He was however able to talk about his thesis work. Your questions wouldn't have caught that at all. His thesis work was in game theory.