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Practical tips on making better predictions. Or, how to get to #1 on DAGGRE. “Who are you? And why are you presenting?”. Scott Leibrand, age 32 B.S. in Cell & Molecular Biology Advanced Services Architect for Limelight Networks
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Practical tips on making better predictions Or, how to get to #1 on DAGGRE
“Who are you? And why are you presenting?” • Scott Leibrand, age 32 • B.S. in Cell & Molecular Biology • Advanced Services Architect for Limelight Networks • Nope, no professional qualifications (for forecasting world events, anyway) • But, I worked my way up to #1 on the DAGGRE leaderboard, so here I am.
Overview • Be judicious • Be less wrong • than the next guy • than you were yesterday • Gather and synthesize information • Act like a fox, not a hedgehog • Share your reasoning • Prioritize • Trade well • Understand the scoring system, and trade accordingly • Keep track of your positions (it’s easy)
Be Judicious • The biggest mistake people make in forecasting is being overconfident. • On DAGGRE, this manifests itself as large edits way outside the range of every else’s estimates, in the absence of new information. • If you make a large edit like that, you’re throwing points away. If you’re confident the consensus is wrong, make a number of small edits. If someone partially reverses you, you’ll be able to accumulate a much larger position much more cheaply.
Be Less Wrong • You’re going to be wrong. Just be less wrong. • Be less wrong than the next guy: If someone makes an overconfident edit, (partially) reverse it. • Be less wrong than you were yesterday: don’t unwaveringly stick to your previous position. If you come across new information, update your estimate. • Be Bayesian: use new info to update your probabilities appropriately. • There’s no penalty for changing your mind and reversing your own estimates.
Gather and synthesize information • You can’t make a good estimate without considering all the relevant, available facts. • Read the comments and links others have posted in the comment section. • Google makes searching easy. Google News Alerts are also essential for efficiently keeping up with a topic you’re invested in. • Be a fox, not a hedgehog. Make estimates considering everything you know, not just the one reason that seems most important to you.
Share your reasoning • DAGGRE is designed to help the group make better predictions. The more information everyone has, the better. • If you have information that others don’t seem to be considering, post it. That helps the market to make better decisions, and helps you: if people agree with your assessment you can take profits. • DAGGRE now requires comments on >10% changes. Make your comments helpful.
Prioritize • You only start with 1000 points. You can’t take a large position on every question. • Your time is limited. • You won’t be an expert on everything. • Even if you are, some questions are just plain uncertain. • Calibrate the size of your position to your confidence.
Trade well • If you want to maximize your points, you have to understand how the scoring system works, and trade accordingly. • Good trading is not a substitute for making good predictions: doing both is the only way to climb the leaderboard very fast. • There are good trading strategies for different kinds of questions, but first you have to identify them. That means making good predictions.
Understanding Scoring • You move one estimate from 5% to 10%, one from 50% to 55%, and another from 90% to 95%. Which costs more? Which gets you more points if you’re right? • You’re confident that both question A and B will resolve false. A is at 10% and B is at 20%. Which one(s) should you move? How much? • When should you reverse an edit to take profits? (Hint: focus on liquidity.)
Trading Strategy 1: Patient Accumulation • If question legitimately has a low (or high) probability, you want to profit off the occasional overconfident misprediction. • Build up a cheap contrarian position when the estimate is really low (high), so you have points to reverse any large contrarian moves. • Repeatedly move the estimate from 1% to 2%. If someone moves it up to 50%, move it back down to 10%. • You’re not betting the consensus is wrong, just that someone else will come along and make an unwise edit. If not, you are only out a few points.
Trading Strategy 2: Genuine Uncertainty • If a question is legitimately uncertain, you want to profit off edits that move the estimate too far in either direction. • This strategy is simple: when the current estimate moves away from your last estimate, make a new estimate that splits the difference. If you estimated 50%, and someone puts it at 70%, move it back to 60%. • The advantage of this strategy is that any position you take naturally gets liquidated over time, as edits move in both directions, and you partially reverse them.
Trading Strategy 3: Use Real Odds • Sometimes there’ll be questions (especially sports) where you can find a quantitative probability of the event. • For example, http://www.playoffstatus.com/ and http://www.oddschecker.com/ • Move the estimates closer to the actual probabilities. • Diversify: you’ll win some and lose some, but if you spread your estimates across all the questions, you’ll likely gain points overall. • Update your estimates often as games are played and the odds change.
Trading Strategy 4: Be First • New questions come out at 50%, but usually don’t stay there. Edit early (in the correct direction) and gain points fast. • Consider related questions, and make conditional edits. • Invest according to your confidence level. Treat others’ estimates as new information. • Once the probability is accurate, start gradually liquidating your position. Always move the estimate back down to at least 98% (or up to 2%) if it gets all the way to 99% (1%). • Consider switching to Patient Accumulation when you manage to fully liquidate.
Track your positions • The strategies above require knowing when estimates change. • Periodically check “My Positions” to see which ones have moved the most. • Check the comments and your Google News Alerts for new information. • Make a few edits each login. Check in frequently.
Follow-up • Play the workshop market: it’s the fastest way to learn. • Play the practice questions. I’ve offered free points to anyone demonstrating a good trading strategy there. • Read Nate Silver’s “The Signal and the Noise”. • Come talk at breaks/lunch. • Connect with me on LinkedIn, Facebook, or scottleibrand@gmail.com