thomblake comments on Survey Results - Less Wrong

48 Post author: Yvain 12 May 2009 10:09PM

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Comment author: thomblake 13 May 2009 02:13:17PM 5 points [-]

Person who put "2172", you probably thought you were screwing up the results, but in fact you managed to counterbalance the other person who put "1700", allowing the mean to revert back to within one year of the correct value :P

Not to worry - I am a believer in the wisdom of crowds, so I knew full well that I wasn't going to be screwing up anything. That response was pure noise.

I just don't like guessing, and so I put "0%" for my confidence on that question, so that one of my answers was definitely wrong and the other was definitely right.

Comment author: MichaelBishop 13 May 2009 03:10:10PM *  5 points [-]

I believe in the wisdom of crowds, but I also think that your actions were screwing up the results.

If you weren't going to take a question seriously, I wish you wouldn't have answered it at all.

ADDED: I decided not to downvote you because I don't want to discourage being honest/forthcoming.

Comment author: kpreid 13 May 2009 04:18:03PM 4 points [-]

0% confidence should mean zero weight when computing the results, no?

Comment author: MichaelBishop 13 May 2009 07:22:20PM 2 points [-]

Yes, but what was the point of that survey question? Among other things, it could assess a) the distribution of the survey takers accuracy, b) the distribution of the survey takers calibration, c) the relationship of accuracy and calibration to other personal characteristics.

I don't mean to make an overly-big-deal about this, and I appreciate thomblake's other contributions to the LW community, but because he didn't really give us his best guess about when the lightbulb was invented, he reduced our ability to learn all these things.

Comment author: orthonormal 13 May 2009 06:28:06PM 1 point [-]

That's an interesting idea, but I think Yvain just averaged the answers without regard to confidence.

Comment author: randallsquared 13 May 2009 04:31:14PM 1 point [-]

I believe in the wisdom of crowds, but I also think that your actions were screwing up the results.

This seems contradictory. Care to explain?

Comment author: orthonormal 13 May 2009 05:11:32PM 6 points [-]

The "wisdom of crowds" would only apply if everyone is trying to actually get the answer right, and if the errors of incompetence are somewhat random. A large number of intentional pranksters (or one prankster who says "a googolplex") can predictably screw up the average by introducing large variance or acting in a non-random fashion.