Sunday, September 13, 2009

Social wisdom: prediction markets

Putting your money where your mouth is


People make predictions all the time

. . . about other peoples' reactions

. . . . . . ability to predict the effect of your action on others is useful

. . . . . . you need a theory of mind

. . . . . . you're in a game theory scenario

. . . . . . data shows population density could be the major cause of human brain size


Human brain. Credits: Patrick J. Lynch, medical illustrator; C. Carl Jaffe, MD, cardiologist. Http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/




Chimpanzee brain. Credits: Gaetan Lee; tilt corrected by Kaldari. Http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/


. . . . . . . . . this is the social competition theory of human brain genesis (ref.: Bailey & Geary, Hominid Brain Evolution: Testing Climatic, Ecological, and Social Competition Models Human Nature, vol. 20, no. 1, Mar. 2009, pp. 67-79. )http://www.springerlink.com/content/13t74x04552g5148/fulltext.html

. . . . . . so the need to predict may explain why we're human!

. . . about the weather



Credits: Don Amaro from Madeira Islands, Portugal, upload by Herrick 17:17, 4 December 2007 (UTC). Http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/



Waterspout. Credits: http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/bigs/wea00308.jpg. 1969 September 10. Photographer: Dr. Joseph Golden, NOAA. Public domain.
. . . . . . The National Weather Service is a large and technical gov't agency devoted to prediction using large computers, etc.
. . . . . . It's not perfect but it's much better than nothing

. . . . . . Group wisdom can be used, e.g. in bet-oriented ways
. . . . . . Will the average global temperature for 2009 be among the highest 5 years recorded?

. . . . . . . . . for about 50 "points" ($5) you can bet it will (or won't) and win $10 (or lose)

. . . about sports

Tim Henman serving at Wimbledon, 2005. Credits: Photo by Spiralz; license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

. . . . . . Sports betting has a long history
. . . . . . People want to predict future outcomes and will pay to do it!
. . . . . . An honest "bookmaker" will offer odds that result in equal payoff regardless of outcome
. . . . . . . . . (But why would you think a bookmaker is honest?)
. . . . . . By equalizing the payoffs, the true odds according to group wisdom become evident
. . . About politics
. . . . . . During election season, media and candidates all try to predict
. . . . . . . . . Some of it you don't hear about
. . . . . . polling, trend analysis, and sociological analysis are big
. . . . . . . . . predictions markets have been claimed to do better
. . . about corporate stocks

. . . . . . The stock market is a "leading economic indicator"
. . . . . . Economists pay special attention to leading indicators

If someone asked you to invent a way to collect group predictive wisdom, what would you likely come up with?

. . . Maybe a Delphi-like method
. . . Probably not prediction markets
. . . . . . An early design for prediction markets appears in The Shockwave Rider, by John Brunner, 1975
. . . . . . His term was Delphi Pool
. . . . . . General idea: putting their money at stake makes people generate better predictions
. . . Terrorism and prediction markets
. . . . . . DARPA's PAM (Policy Analysis Market) permitted a prediction market for terrorist attacks
+ we might have forwarning
- terrorists might buy predictions, then make them come true to make money!
. . . . . . In 2003 2 senators found out, PAM was cancelled, and a DARPA program director resigned
. . . . . . . . . not clear that terrorist predictions were ever traded on it
An example prediction market
. . . see www.intrade.com, check short video, and look at the site
. . . HW will be sent tomorrow, will be to invest pretend money in a prediction market, and to research and compare prediction markets and the Delphi method

2 comments:

  1. Nice post. It is always good to see people expressing themselves in different ways.

    Since you seem to be associated with Management, I would like to suggest you a new magazine - PEOPLE MATTERS started by an ISB Alumni, which was suggested to me by a friend and which I have found very useful.

    It deals with various important aspects of management, especially those related to Leadership & People Management.

    It's also relatively cheap. I guess its annual subscription is about Rs. 400 (US$ 8 approx) which is even less than the cost of a standard Pizza.

    Their last issue had an enlightening article by Robert Kaplan (the co-founder of Balanced Scorecard method, if you remember) where he talks about how organisations can create opportunities out of current economic downturn.

    I got its subscription online through their website: http://www.peoplematters.in

    If you like the magazine, kindly refer it to your friends or colleagues in the organization you work. They may be interested in subscribing to it.

    Thanks

    ReplyDelete
  2. See the PM Chicago PM Summit.

    http://www.pmcluster.com/CHI09.htm

    -j

    ReplyDelete

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