Superforecaster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A superforecaster is a person who makes forecasts that can be shown by statistical means to be consistently more accurate than the general public or experts. Superforecasters sometimes use modern analytical and statistical methodologies to augment estimates of base rates of events; research finds that such forecasters are typically more accurate than experts in the field who do not use analytical and statistical techniques.[1]

Etymology[]

The term is a combination of the words super meaning "above average" and forecaster meaning one who suggests an outcome that might occur in the future.

History[]

Origins of the term are attributed to Philip E. Tetlock with results from The Good Judgment Project and subsequent book with Dan Gardner Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction.[2]

In December 2019 a Central Intelligence Agency analyst writing under the pseudonym "Bobby W." suggested the Intelligence community should study superforecaster research on how certain individuals with "particular traits" are better forecasters and how they should be leveraged.[3]

In February 2020 Dominic Cummings agreed with Tetlock and others in implying that study of superforecasting was more effective than listening to political pundits.[4]

Superforecasters[]

Science[]

Superforecasters estimate a probability of an occurrence, and review the estimate when circumstances contributing to the estimate change. This is based on both personal impressions, public data, and incorporating input from other superforecasters, but attempts to remove bias in their estimates.[5] In The Good Judgment Project one set of forecasters were given training on how to translate their understandings into a probabilistic forecast, summarised into an acronym "CHAMP" for Comparisons, Historical trends, Average opinions, Mathematical models, and Predictable biases.[6]

A study published in 2021 used a Bias, Information, Noise (BIN) model to study the underlying processes enabling accuracy among superforecasters. The conclusion was that superforecasters' ability to filter out "noise" played a more significant role in improving accuracy than bias reduction or the efficient extraction of information.[7]

Effectiveness[]

In the Good Judgment Project, "the top forecasters... performed about 30 percent better than the average for intelligence community analysts who could read intercepts and other secret data".[8][9]

Training forecasters with specialised techniques may increase forecaster accuracy: in the Good Judgment Project, one group was given training in the "CHAMP" methodology, which appeared to increase forecasting accuracy.[6]

Superforecasters do not predict the future with perfect accuracy: Bloomberg notes that they made a prediction of 23% for a leave vote in the month of the June 2016 Brexit referendum. On the other hand, the BBC notes that they accurately predicted Donald Trump's success in the 2016 Republican Party primaries.[10]

Superforecasters also made a number of accurate and important forecasts about the coronavirus pandemic, which "businesses, governments and other institutions" have drawn upon. In addition, they have made "accurate predictions about world events like the approval of the United Kingdom’s Brexit vote in 2020, Saudi Arabia’s decision to partially take its national gas company public in 2019, and the status of Russia’s food embargo against some European countries also in 2019".[11]

Aid agencies are also using superforecasting to determine to the probability of droughts becoming famines,[1] while the Center for a New American Security has described how superforecasters aided them in predicting future Colombian government policy.[12] Goldman Sachs drew upon superforecasters' vaccine forecasts during the coronavirus pandemic to inform their analyses.[13]

Traits[]

One of Tetlock's findings from the Good Judgment Project was that cognitive and personality traits were more important than specialised knowledge when it came to predicting the outcome of various world events typically more accurately than intelligence agencies.[14] In particular, a 2015 study found that key predictors of forecasting accuracy were "cognitive ability [IQ], political knowledge, and open-mindedness".[15] Superforecasters "were better at inductive reasoning, pattern detection, cognitive flexibility, and open-mindedness". In the Good Judgment Project, the superforecasters "scored higher on both intelligence and political knowledge than the already well-above-average group of forecasters" who were taking part in the tournament.[16]

People[]

  • Elaine Rich, a superforecaster who participated in the Good Judgement Project.[17]
  • Andrew Sabisky, who resigned from his position as advisor to the United Kingdom government at Downing Street, with chief advisor Dominic Cummings telling journalists "read Philip Tetlock's Superforecasters, instead of political pundits who don't know what they're talking about".[4]
  • Nick Hare, former head of futures and analytical methods at the Ministry of Defence (MoD).[14]
  • Reed Roberts, a former PhD student in Chemistry.[14]
  • Jonathon Kitson[18]
  • Jean-Pierre Beugoms[19]
  • Dan Mayland[19]
  • Kjirste Morrell[19]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Adonis (2020).
  2. ^ Tetlock & Gardner (2015).
  3. ^ Bobby W. (2019), p. 14.
  4. ^ a b BBC News (2020).
  5. ^ BBC News (2020), What is the science behind it?.
  6. ^ a b Harford (2014), How to be a superforecaster.
  7. ^ Satopää VA, Salikhov M, Tetlock PE, Mellers B. "Bias, Information, Noise: The BIN Model of Forecasting". Management Science. 2021.
  8. ^ David Ignatius. "More chatter than needed". The Washington Post. 1st November 2013.
  9. ^ Horowitz MC, Ciocca J, Kahn L, Ruhl C. "Keeping Score: A New Approach to Geopolitical Forecasting" (PDF). Perry World House, University of Pennsylvania. 2021, p.9.
  10. ^ BBC News (2020), How successful is it?.
  11. ^ Tara Law. "'Superforecasters' Are Making Eerily Accurate Predictions About COVID-19. Our Leaders Could Learn From Their Approach." TIME. 11th June 2020.
  12. ^ Cochran KM, Tozzi G. "Getting it Righter, Faster: The Role of Prediction in Agile Government Decisionmaking". Center for a New American Security. 2017.
  13. ^ Hatzius J, Struyven D, Bhushan S, Milo D. "V(accine)-Shaped Recovery". Goldman Sachs Economics Research. 7th November 2020.
  14. ^ a b c Burton (2015).
  15. ^ Mellers B, Stone E, Atanasov P, Rohrbaugh N, Metz SE, Ungar L, et al. "The psychology of intelligence analysis: drivers of prediction accuracy in world politics" (PDF). Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied. 2015;21(1):1-14.
  16. ^ Mellers B, Stone E, Atanasov P, Rohrbaugh N, Metz SE, Ungar L, et al. "The psychology of intelligence analysis: drivers of prediction accuracy in world politics" (PDF). Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied. 2015;21(1):1-14.
  17. ^ Nilaya (2015), Guests.
  18. ^ "Superforecasting: The Future's Chequered Past and Present". whynow. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
  19. ^ a b c "Superforecaster Profiles". Good Judgment. Retrieved 17 July 2021.

Further reading[]

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