Philip E. Tetlock

Philip E. Tetlock (born 1954) is Leonore Annenberg University Professor of Psychology and Management at the University of Pennsylvania. He has also written several non-fiction books on political psychology, including Counterfactual Thought Experiments in World Politics (with Aaron Belkin; 1996) and Expert Political Judgment: How Good Is It? How Can We Know? Tetlock is also co-leader of The Good Judgment Project, a multi-year study of crowd-sourcing forecasts of world events.

His Expert Political Judgment: How Good Is It? How Can We Know? (2005) describes a twenty-year study in which 284 experts in many fields, including government officials, professors, journalists, and other, and with many opinions, from Marxists to free-marketeers, were asked to make 28,000 predictions[1][2] about the future, finding that they were only slightly more accurate than chance, and worse than basic computer algorithms. As a result of this work, he received the 2008 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order.[3] Tetlock was awarded the Woodrow Wilson Award for best book published on government, politics, or international affairs and Robert E. Lane Award for best book in political psychology, both from American Political Science Association in 2005. Forecasters with the biggest news media profiles were especially bad. The study also compared the records of "foxes" and "hedgehogs" (two personality types identified in The Hedgehog and the Fox).[4]

Tetlock was born in Canada and studied at the University of British Columbia and Yale University.[5]

Value of statistics

Tetlock's conclusion is that even crude extrapolations are more reliable than human predictions in every domain his study observed, confirming the claims of other psychological research.[6]

Awards

In 2000 Tetlock was awarded the NAS Award for Behavior Research Relevant to the Prevention of Nuclear War from the National Academy of Sciences.[7] He was the winner of the 1987 AAAS Prize for Behavioral Science Research.[8]

References

  1. Bialik, Carl (6 January 2006). "Evaluating Political Pundits". The Wall Street Journal.
  2. http://longnow.org/seminars/02007/jan/26/why-foxes-are-better-forecasters-than-hedgehogs/
  3. "2008- Philip Tetlock".
  4. Philip E. Tetlock (2006). "How Accurate Are Your Pet Pundits?". Project Syndicate.
  5. "Biography".
  6. Tetlock, P.E. (2005) Expert Political Judgment: How Good is it? How Can we Know? Princeton, Princeton University Press, p 54
  7. "NAS Award for Behavior Research Relevant to the Prevention of Nuclear War". National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  8. History & Archives: AAAS Prize for Behavioral Science Research

External links