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Nate Silver

The Signal and the Noise: Why Most Predictions Fail-But Some Don't

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  • lshas quoted6 years ago
    What happens in systems with noisy data and underdeveloped theory—like earthquake prediction and parts of economics and political science—is a two-step process. First, people start to mistake the noise for a signal. Second, this noise pollutes journals, blogs, and news accounts with false alarms, undermining good science and setting back our ability to understand how the system really works.
  • Александр Кулиничhas quoted2 years ago
    friend Anil Kashyap, who teaches a course on the financial crisis to students at the University of Chicago, has come up with a simplified example of a CDO, and I’ll use a version of this example here.
  • Александр Кулиничhas quoted2 years ago
    Nobody saw it coming. When you can’t state your innocence, proclaim your ignorance: this is often the first line of defense when there is a failed forecast.13 But
  • Александр Кулиничhas quoted2 years ago
    Standard & Poor’s told investors, for instance, that when it rated a particularly complex type of security known as a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) at AAA, there was only a 0.12 percent probability—about 1 chance in 850—that it would fail to pay out over the next five years
  • Александр Кулиничhas quoted2 years ago
    he story the data tells us is often the one we’d like to hear, and we usually make sure that it has a happy ending.
  • lshas quoted6 years ago
    But as was the case in other fields, like earthquake forecasting during that time period, improved technology did not cover for the lack of theoretical understanding about the economy; it only gave economists faster and more elaborate ways to mistake noise for a signal
  • lshas quoted6 years ago
    An oft-told joke: a statistician drowned crossing a river that was only three feet deep on average.
  • Alohas quoted6 years ago
    The housing bubble can be thought of as a poor prediction. Homeowners and investors thought that rising prices implied that home values would continue to rise, when in fact history suggested this made them prone to decline
  • Alohas quoted6 years ago
    When there is an excess of greed in the system, there is a bubble
  • Heri Heryadihas quoted7 years ago
    The original revolution in information technology came not with the microchip, but with the printing press.
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