The Good Judgment Team led by psychologists P. Tetlock and B. Mellers of the University of Pennsylvania was the most successful of five research projects sponsored through 2015 by the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity to develop improved group forecast aggregation algorithms. Each team had at least 10 algorithms under continuous development and evaluation over the 4‐year project. The mean Brier score was used to rank the algorithms on approximately 130 questions concerning categorical geopolitical events each year. An algorithm would return aggregate probabilities for each question based on the probabilities provided per question by thousands of individuals, who had been recruited by the Good Judgment Team. This paper summari...
Empirical comparisons of reasonable approaches provide evidence on the best forecasting procedures t...
Five university-based research groups competed to recruit forecasters, elicit their predictions, and...
Nous nous intéressons à prévoir séquentiellement une suite arbitraire d'observations. À chaque insta...
The Good Judgment Team led by psychologists P. Tetlock and B. Mellers of the University of Pennsylva...
The ``Wisdom of the crowds'' is the concept that the average estimate of a group of judges is often ...
This study introduces a new forecast aggregation technique. Adding to the well- known difficulties a...
This article proposes an Item Response Theoretical (IRT) forecasting model that incorporates proper ...
There are many examples of “wisdom of the crowd” effects in which the large number of participants i...
Copyright © 2012 Royal Meteorological SocietyThe Brier score is a widely used measure of performance...
In this article, we develop and study methods for evaluating forecasters and forecasting questions i...
Most subjective probability aggregation procedures use a single probability judgment from each exper...
We analyze the monthly forecasts for annual US GDP growth, CPI inflation rate and the unemployment r...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Crowdsourcing enables the solicitation of forecasts on a variety of prediction tasks from distribute...
All three articles in my dissertation gather information from individuals, analyze it, and aggregate...
Empirical comparisons of reasonable approaches provide evidence on the best forecasting procedures t...
Five university-based research groups competed to recruit forecasters, elicit their predictions, and...
Nous nous intéressons à prévoir séquentiellement une suite arbitraire d'observations. À chaque insta...
The Good Judgment Team led by psychologists P. Tetlock and B. Mellers of the University of Pennsylva...
The ``Wisdom of the crowds'' is the concept that the average estimate of a group of judges is often ...
This study introduces a new forecast aggregation technique. Adding to the well- known difficulties a...
This article proposes an Item Response Theoretical (IRT) forecasting model that incorporates proper ...
There are many examples of “wisdom of the crowd” effects in which the large number of participants i...
Copyright © 2012 Royal Meteorological SocietyThe Brier score is a widely used measure of performance...
In this article, we develop and study methods for evaluating forecasters and forecasting questions i...
Most subjective probability aggregation procedures use a single probability judgment from each exper...
We analyze the monthly forecasts for annual US GDP growth, CPI inflation rate and the unemployment r...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Crowdsourcing enables the solicitation of forecasts on a variety of prediction tasks from distribute...
All three articles in my dissertation gather information from individuals, analyze it, and aggregate...
Empirical comparisons of reasonable approaches provide evidence on the best forecasting procedures t...
Five university-based research groups competed to recruit forecasters, elicit their predictions, and...
Nous nous intéressons à prévoir séquentiellement une suite arbitraire d'observations. À chaque insta...