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Predicting Experimental Results
by
Pope, Devin
, DellaVigna, Stefano
in
Accuracy
/ Behavior modification
/ Citations
/ Crowds
/ Economic theory
/ Experts
/ Experts versus novices
/ Forecasting
/ Political economy
/ Treatment methods
/ Wisdom
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Predicting Experimental Results
by
Pope, Devin
, DellaVigna, Stefano
in
Accuracy
/ Behavior modification
/ Citations
/ Crowds
/ Economic theory
/ Experts
/ Experts versus novices
/ Forecasting
/ Political economy
/ Treatment methods
/ Wisdom
2018
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Journal Article
Predicting Experimental Results
2018
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Overview
We analyze how academic experts and nonexperts forecast the results of 15 piece-rate and behavioral treatments in a real-effort task. The average forecast of experts closely predicts the experimental results, with a strong wisdom-of-crowds effect: the average forecast outperforms 96 percent of individual forecasts. Citations, academic rank, field, and contextual experience do not correlate with accuracy. Experts as a group do better than nonexperts, but not if accuracy is defined as rank-ordering treatments. Measures of effort, confidence, and revealed ability are predictive of forecast accuracy to some extent and allow us to identify “superforecasters” among the nonexperts.
Publisher
University of Chicago Press,University of Chicago, acting through its Press
Subject
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