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Talking probabilities: communicating probabilistic information with words and numbers. Silja Renooij, Cilia Witteman Presented by: Jiangbo Dang. Outline. Motivation Related works Four experiments Results and discussions Conclusion Additional references. Motivation.
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Talking probabilities: communicating probabilistic information with words and numbers Silja Renooij, Cilia Witteman Presented by: Jiangbo Dang
Outline • Motivation • Related works • Four experiments • Results and discussions • Conclusion • Additional references
Motivation • Numerical probabilities is often considered a major obstacle in the construction of a Bayesian Network • Verbal probabilities are perceived as more natural than numerical probabilities, easier to understand and communicate and better suited to convey the vagueness of opinions • A combination of a numerical probability scale with a verbal probability scale may help to remove the mentioned obstacle
Why obstacle • On the input side, it may be a prohibitive quantity of probabilities for all variables in Bayesian network. Experts are reluctant to express them in numerical form, they find it difficult to attach a number to their beliefs. • On the output side, explanation of the results in term of variables with numerical probabilities may be un- comfortable.
Related work • Translate numerical probabilities into words and vice versa • Compare Verbal probability expressions with numerical probability expressions under certain situations (Physician prefer verbal to number) • Limit the number of verbal expression in a scale
Four experiments • Collect a list of commonly used verbal probability expressions • Determine a rank order for probability expressions from previous experiment • Rate difference between those expressions and develop a scale • Test the translations of the verbal probability expressions into the calculated numerical probabilities.
3. Rate distances between those expressions • Pairwise comparison (28 pairs for 8 expressions) • Produce co-ordinates for expressions, those co-ordinates best fit the distances given by different subjects • Map co-ordinates onto a probability scale by setting certain and impossible representing 100% and 0%
4. Test probability scale • Compare the decisions subjects made when they are using probability in verbal form to their decisions when they are using numerical probability.
Conclusion • A probability scale with mutually exchangeable verbal and numerical probability expressions is helpful in BN constructions • Numbers may be just as vague as words for expressing uncertainty • Shortcoming: Dutch subjects and Dutch words
References • Cilia Witteman, Silja Renooij. “Evaluation of a verbal-numerical probability scale” • L. C. van at el. “Probabilities for a probabilistic network: a case study in oesophageal cancer”