The “wisdom of crowds ” refers to the phenomenon that aggregated predictions from a large group of people can rival or even beat the accuracy of experts. In domains with substantial stochastic elements, such as stock picking, crowd strategies (e.g. indexing) are difficult to beat. However, in domains in which some crowd members have demonstrably more skill than others, smart sub-crowds could possibly outperform the whole. The central question this work addresses is whether such smart subsets of a crowd can be identified a priori in a large-scale prediction contest that has substantial skill and luck components. We study this question with data obtained from fantasy soccer, a game in which millions of people choose professional players from ...
Although researchers have documented many instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether...
© 2018 Geoffrey SawIn traditional studies into the wisdom of the crowd - for example the study by Ga...
This paper examines the prediction contests as a vehicle for aggregating the opinions of a crowd of ...
Participants in Fantasy Sports make a critical decision: selecting productive players for their fant...
Prediction markets have proved excellent tools for forecasting, outperforming experts and polls in m...
This paper investigates the value of collective judgments which stem from settings that have not bee...
A crowd sampled from a set of individuals can provide a more accurate prediction in aggregate than m...
peer-reviewedIn all competitions where results are based upon an individual’s performance the questi...
AbstractCrowd wisdom has manifested itself in several successful business applications, most notably...
As Web 2.0 facilitates the collection of a vast amount of interactions, a phenomena, known as the wi...
In all competitions where results are based upon an individual's performance the question of whether...
In the last decade, interest in the “wisdom of crowds” effect has gained momentum in both organizati...
We analyse the accuracy of crowd forecasts produced on Oddsportal, an online community of amateur sp...
Although researchers have documented instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether some...
Although researchers have documented many instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether...
Although researchers have documented many instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether...
© 2018 Geoffrey SawIn traditional studies into the wisdom of the crowd - for example the study by Ga...
This paper examines the prediction contests as a vehicle for aggregating the opinions of a crowd of ...
Participants in Fantasy Sports make a critical decision: selecting productive players for their fant...
Prediction markets have proved excellent tools for forecasting, outperforming experts and polls in m...
This paper investigates the value of collective judgments which stem from settings that have not bee...
A crowd sampled from a set of individuals can provide a more accurate prediction in aggregate than m...
peer-reviewedIn all competitions where results are based upon an individual’s performance the questi...
AbstractCrowd wisdom has manifested itself in several successful business applications, most notably...
As Web 2.0 facilitates the collection of a vast amount of interactions, a phenomena, known as the wi...
In all competitions where results are based upon an individual's performance the question of whether...
In the last decade, interest in the “wisdom of crowds” effect has gained momentum in both organizati...
We analyse the accuracy of crowd forecasts produced on Oddsportal, an online community of amateur sp...
Although researchers have documented instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether some...
Although researchers have documented many instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether...
Although researchers have documented many instances of crowd wisdom, it is important to know whether...
© 2018 Geoffrey SawIn traditional studies into the wisdom of the crowd - for example the study by Ga...
This paper examines the prediction contests as a vehicle for aggregating the opinions of a crowd of ...