Spring 2021 Seminar event

Date: 

Friday, April 16, 2021, 10:00am to 11:30am

Location: 

Zoom conference

PresenterEric Neyman
Topic: From Proper Scoring Rules to Max-Min Optimal Forecast Aggregation

Spring 2021 Seminar

The EconCS Group holds an Economics and Computer Science research seminar each semester.

Spring 2021 meetings are held at 10-11:30am on Fridays. Seminar Coordinators for Spring '21 are Mark York, markyork@g.harvard.edu and Anson Kang, ansonkahng@college.harvard.edu

 

Abstract: This paper forges a strong connection between two seemingly unrelated forecasting problems: incentive-compatible forecast elicitation and forecast aggregation. Proper scoring rules are the well-known solution to the former problem. To each such rule s we associate a corresponding method of aggregation, mapping expert forecasts and expert weights to a "consensus forecast," which we call *quasi-arithmetic (QA) pooling* with respect to s. We justify this correspondence in several ways:

- QA pooling with respect to the two most well-studied scoring rules (quadratic and logarithmic) corresponds to the two most well-studied forecast aggregation methods (linear and logarithmic).
- Given a scoring rule s used for payment, a forecaster agent who sub-contracts several experts, paying them in proportion to their weights, is best off aggregating the experts' reports using QA pooling with respect to s, meaning this strategy maximizes its worst-case profit (over the possible outcomes).
- The score of an aggregator who uses QA pooling is concave in the experts' weights. As a consequence, online gradient descent can be used to learn appropriate expert weights from repeated experiments with low regret.
- The class of all QA pooling methods is characterized by a natural set of axioms (generalizing classical work by Kolmogorov on quasi-arithmetic means).