English

Neutral Pivoting: Strong Bias Correction for Shared Information

Applications 2024-04-30 v1 Methodology

Abstract

In the absence of historical data for use as forecasting inputs, decision makers often ask a panel of judges to predict the outcome of interest, leveraging the wisdom of the crowd (Surowiecki 2005). Even if the crowd is large and skilled, shared information can bias the simple mean of judges' estimates. Addressing the issue of bias, Palley and Soll (2019) introduces a novel approach called pivoting. Pivoting can take several forms, most notably the powerful and reliable minimal pivot. We build on the intuition of the minimal pivot and propose a more aggressive bias correction known as the neutral pivot. The neutral pivot achieves the largest bias correction of its class that both avoids the need to directly estimate crowd composition or skill and maintains a smaller expected squared error than the simple mean for all considered settings. Empirical assessments on real datasets confirm the effectiveness of the neutral pivot compared to current methods.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2404.17737,
  title  = {Neutral Pivoting: Strong Bias Correction for Shared Information},
  author = {Joseph Rilling},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2404.17737},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

11 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:08:15.366Z