Higher order elicitability and Osband's principle (Q309736)

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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6624591
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    Higher order elicitability and Osband's principle
    scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6624591

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      Higher order elicitability and Osband's principle (English)
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      7 September 2016
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      consistency
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      decision theory
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      elicitability
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      expected shortfall
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      point forecasts
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      propriety
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      scoring functions
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      scoring rules
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      spectral risk measures
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      value at risk
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      forecaster
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      unique minimizer
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      Osband's principle
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      The article contributes to the decision-theoretic framework for the evaluation of point forecasts. Let \(Y \in \mathbb{R}^d\) be a random variable observed by a forecaster, \(F\) be its cumulative distribution function, \(T(F) \in \mathbb{R}^k\) be a functional and \(S(x,y)\) be a scoring function (\(x \in \mathbb{R}^k\), \(y \in \mathbb{R}^d\)). A scoring function is said to be strictly consistent for \(T(F)\) if \(x=T(F)\) is the unique minimizer for \(E_F(S(x,Y))\) for all \(F\). A functional \(T(F)\) is called elicitable if there exists a strictly consistent scoring function for it. In case \(d=k=1\), the examples are moments, ratios of moments, quantiles and expectiles. However, the variance is not an elicitable functional if \(k=1\) but may be a component of an elicitable functional if \(k \geq 2\).NEWLINENEWLINEIn the paper, the necessary and sufficient conditions for strictly consistent scoring functions are given. Some new examples of one-dimensional functionals which are not elicitable but may be a component of multi-dimensional elicitable functional are considered.
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