Eliciting and Aggregating Forecasts When Information is Shared

dc.contributor.advisor

Soll, Jack B

dc.contributor.advisor

Nau, Robert

dc.contributor.author

Palley, Asa

dc.date.accessioned

2016-06-06T16:12:00Z

dc.date.available

2018-04-26T08:17:11Z

dc.date.issued

2016

dc.department

Business Administration

dc.description.abstract

Using the wisdom of crowds---combining many individual forecasts to obtain an aggregate estimate---can be an effective technique for improving forecast accuracy. When individual forecasts are drawn from independent and identical information sources, a simple average provides the optimal crowd forecast. However, correlated forecast errors greatly limit the ability of the wisdom of crowds to recover the truth. In practice, this dependence often emerges because information is shared: forecasters may to a large extent draw on the same data when formulating their responses.

To address this problem, I propose an elicitation procedure in which each respondent is asked to provide both their own best forecast and a guess of the average forecast that will be given by all other respondents. I study optimal responses in a stylized information setting and develop an aggregation method, called pivoting, which separates individual forecasts into shared and private information and then recombines these results in the optimal manner. I develop a tailored pivoting procedure for each of three information models, and introduce a simple and robust variant that outperforms the simple average across a variety of settings.

In three experiments, I investigate the method and the accuracy of the crowd forecasts. In the first study, I vary the shared and private information in a controlled environment, while the latter two studies examine forecasts in real-world contexts. Overall, the data suggest that a simple minimal pivoting procedure provides an effective aggregation technique that can significantly outperform the crowd average.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12247

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Business administration

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Economic theory

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Aggregation

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Forecasting

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Shared Information

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Wisdom of Crowds

dc.title

Eliciting and Aggregating Forecasts When Information is Shared

dc.type

Dissertation

duke.embargo.months

23

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