Applied Statistical Decision TheoryDivision of Research, Graduate School of Business Adminitration, Harvard University, 1961 - Business & Economics - 356 pages "In the field of statistical decision theory, Raiffa and Schlaifer have sought to develop new analytic techniques by which the modern theory of utility and subjective probability can actually be applied to the economic analysis of typical sampling problems." --From the foreword to their classic work "Applied Statistical Decision Theory," First published in the 1960s through Harvard University and MIT Press, the book is now offered in a new paperback edition from Wiley |
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Page 81
... 5 . Computation of the expected terminal utility ut ( e ) will of course require the successive steps of terminal and preposterior analysis defined in Section 81 Applicability and Usefulness 4.2 Computation of Expected Utility.
... 5 . Computation of the expected terminal utility ut ( e ) will of course require the successive steps of terminal and preposterior analysis defined in Section 81 Applicability and Usefulness 4.2 Computation of Expected Utility.
Page 88
Howard Raiffa, Robert Schlaifer. maker's realized terminal utility . Let us similarly define a ' to be an act which maximizes the decision maker's expected utility under his prior distribution of 8 , satisfying E ' , u , ( a ' , 0 ) ≥ E ...
Howard Raiffa, Robert Schlaifer. maker's realized terminal utility . Let us similarly define a ' to be an act which maximizes the decision maker's expected utility under his prior distribution of 8 , satisfying E ' , u , ( a ' , 0 ) ≥ E ...
Page 90
... expected terminal utility E2 u . ( a , 0 ) as a function of the experimental outcome z . If the optimal act under the prior distribution would be a ' = a , but if instead of Eaz u2 ( 0 , 0 ) Eaz 42 ( 02,0 ) V1 ( e , z . ) Ea1242 ( 03 ...
... expected terminal utility E2 u . ( a , 0 ) as a function of the experimental outcome z . If the optimal act under the prior distribution would be a ' = a , but if instead of Eaz u2 ( 0 , 0 ) Eaz 42 ( 02,0 ) V1 ( e , z . ) Ea1242 ( 03 ...
Contents
The Problem and the Two Basic Modes of Analysis | 3 |
Univariate Normalized Mass and Density Functions | 7 |
Combination of Formal and Informal Analysis | 17 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
a₁ a₂ approximation assign assumption Bernoulli process beta function binomial choose compute conditional measure conjugate Conjugate prior cost cumulative function data-generating process decision maker decision problem decision tree defined definition denote estimate evaluated EVPI EVSI example expected terminal opportunity expected utility expected value experiment experimental outcome extensive form Ezle Figure follows gamma gamma-2 given h is known h is unknown k₁ k₂ kernel li(a li(e li(eo likelihood linear marginal measure mass function n₁ normalized density function observations obtain optimal act optimal sample parameter perfect information Poisson possible posterior density posterior distribution preposterior analysis prior density prior distribution prior expected probability quantity random variable sample information Section stopping process Substituting sufficient statistic Table terminal act terminal analysis terminal opportunity loss terminal utility theorem tion u₁ utility characteristic value of perfect vector vi(e