Proper scoring rules for estimation and forecast evaluation
Waghmare, Kartik, Ziegel, Johanna
In recent years, proper scoring rules have emerged as a power ful general approach for estimating probability distributions. In addition to significantly ex panding the range of modeling techniques that can be applied in practice, this has also substantially broadened the conceptual understanding of estimation methods. Originally, proper scoring rules we re conceived in meteorology as summary statistics for describing the performance of probabilisti c forecasts ( Murphy and Winkler, 1984), but they also play an important role in economics as tools for bel ief elicitation ( Schotter and Trevino, 2014). A probabilistic forecast is a probability distribution ove r the space of the possible outcomes of the future event that is stated by the forecaster. The simple st and most popular case of probabilistic forecasts arises when the outcome is binary, so the probabilistic forecast reduces to issuing a predictive probability of success. Brier ( 1950) was the first to consider the problem of devising a scoring rule which could not be "played" by a dishonest fore casting agent. He introduced the quadratic scoring rule and showed that it incentivizes a for ecasting agent to state his most accurate probability estimate when faced with uncertainty.
Apr-2-2025
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