I have my first hand for this category:
The other fifteen tables saw a normal auction:
At those tables, declarer made either 10 tricks (ten times) or 12 tricks (five times), mostly depending on whether previous play revealed the club split (which allowed a marked finesse).
I can't count the number of times I see South throw in a completely random double (as in the auction accompanying the hand diagram) which causes the Robot to abandon a completely normal (and cold) 3NT contract for some suit contract that goes down (in other words, the double usually "works" - but it didn't this time), or makes fewer tricks than NT. I enjoyed seeing the double punished on this hand.
The 5NT bid seems a bit useless. East can't have any kings below clubs, and if East can't act over the quantitative 4NT, zero chance exists that East will suddenly find a grand slam bid. Obviously, I want to know what caused East to run from 3NT (again, I see that fairly frequently by players who have apparently determined that such doubles against the Robot win more often than they lose). Bidding a slam after the opponents make a penalty double of your game seems odd, especially after West passed the double (a penalty redouble by West might have caused South some discomfort), but West always had a slam invite. I don't know why the double would cause the Robot to drive to slam, though (any other response to Blackwood still forces a club slam).