- Howard Raiffa
Howard Raiffa (1924– IPAEng|ˈreɪfə) is the
Frank P. Ramsey Professor (Emeritus) of ManagerialEconomics , a joint chair held by theBusiness School and theKennedy School of Government atHarvard University . He is an influentialBayesian decision theorist andnegotiation theorist.*His book "Applied Statistical Decision Theory" with
Robert Schlaifer introduced the idea ofconjugate prior distributions.
*A lecture of his in the 1960s concerning the use of Bayesian methods for betting on horses gaveJohn Craven USN , aUS Navy scientist the idea of using Bayesian methods to search for a missing US Air Force hydrogen bomb lost near Palomares, Spain in thePalomares hydrogen bombs incident of 1966. Craven used the same methods again in the search for the lost submarine USS "Scorpion" in 1968. Raiffa has analysed situations involving the use ofsubjective probability and argues that subjective probabilities should follow the same rules (theKolmogorov axioms ) as objective, frequency-based probabilities.Consider a situation in which you are required to gamble and are given two possible gambles.
Gamble A, in which you bet on the outcome of a fight between the world's greatest boxer and the world's greatest wrestler in a ring fight. (Assume you are fairly ignorant about martial arts and would have great difficulty making a choice of who to bet on.) If your chosen champion wins you win $500 otherwise you get nothing. You place your choice in a sealed envelope which is opened after the game.
Gamble B. Draw a ball from an opaque urn known to contain 50 orange and 50 blue balls. You will receive $500 if you draw an orange ball and nothing for a blue ball. The balls have been thoroughly mixed and you should assume that all balls are equally likely to be drawn. The draw takes place after the ring match is over.
Many people would feel more unsure about taking Gamble A in which the probabilities are unknown, rather than Gamble B, in which the probabilities are easily seen to be one half for each outcome.
Raiffa argues that a decision-maker should in fact assign a subjective probability of one-half to each outcome of Gamble A, provided that no information was available which makes one outcome more likely than the other.
Raiffa argues as follows. Suppose someone has the following preferences. If forced to take Gamble A they would bet on the boxer, but if given a free choice between the gambles they would prefer Gamble B. Presumably, such a person when allowed to choose Gamble A would prefer to simply bet on the boxer rather than toss a coin to decide the matter of whether they should bet on the boxer or the wrestler. But this randomised approach is equivalent to Gamble B. So, by the
axioms ofsubstitutibility andtransitivity for utilities, they should also prefer to bet on the boxer than on Gamble B. A similar argument can be used to show that when the player has no preference between the boxer and the wrestler he should also have no preference between Gamble A and Gamble B.(The
axiom of substitutibility says that if someone is indifferent between outcomes A and B and indifferent between outcomes A and C, they should be indifferent between B and C. Theaxiom of transitivity says that if someone prefers outcome A to B and also prefers B to C, then they should prefer A to C.)Others, such as
Daniel Ellsberg disagree with Raiffa's reasoning and have devised alternatives interpretations of decision theory. One of the most radical departures isDempster-Shafer theory which rejects the use ofprobability theory completely, in favour of a theory of "belief functions" which do not satisfy theaxioms of probability .References
*Luce, R.D. and Raiffa, H. (1957) "Games and Decisions: Introduction and Critical Survey", Wiley & Sons
*Raiffa, H. "Decision Analysis: Introductory Lectures on Choices Under Uncertainty". McGraw-Hill College Custom Series.1997.
*Raiffa, H. and Schaifer, R. "Applied Statistical Decision Theory" (1961). Wiley Classics Library.2000.External links
*Howard Raiffa's page at Harvard [http://www.pon.harvard.edu/about/committee/hraiffa.php]
* [http://www.imstat.org/sts/future_papers.html Stephen E. Fienberg "The Early Statistical Years: 1947-1967. A Conversation With Howard Raiffa" (Papers to appear in "Statisticial Science"). ]
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