Paras Dahal

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The experts in his survey—regardless of their occupation, experience, or subfield—had done barely any better than random chance, and they had done worse than even rudimentary statistical methods at predicting future political events. They were grossly overconfident and terrible at calculating probabilities: about 15 percent of events that they claimed had no chance of occurring in fact happened, while about 25 percent of those that they said were absolutely sure things in fact failed to occur.15 It didn’t matter whether the experts were making predictions about economics, domestic politics, or ...more
The Signal and the Noise: The Art and Science of Prediction
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