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Chapter 2 Supplement 2: Decision Analysis

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Title: Chapter 2 Supplement 2: Decision Analysis


1
Chapter 2 Supplement 2 Decision Analysis
  • Quantitative decision-making techniques
  • for situations where uncertainty exists

2
Two volunteers needed
3
Decision Analysis
  • Quantitative decision-making techniques
  • for situations where uncertainty exists

4
Decision Making
  • States of nature
  • Events that may occur in the future
  • Decision maker is uncertain which state of nature
    will occur
  • Decision maker has no control over the states of
    nature

5
Decision Making
  • Example Two possible states of nature
  • Today it will rain OR Today it will not
    rain
  • We are uncertain which state of nature will
    occur
  • We have no control over the state of nature

6
Payoff Table
  • A method of organizing illustrating the payoffs
    from different decisions given various states of
    nature
  • A payoff is the outcome (benefit or loss) of the
    decision

7
Payoff Table
  • States Of Nature
  • Decision RAIN NO RAIN
  • UMBRELLA stay dry stay dry
  • NO UMBRELLA get wet stay dry

Two states RAIN or NO RAIN One decision
choose UMBRELLA or NO UMBRELLA Possible
outcomes stay dry or get wet
8
Payoff Table
  • States Of Nature
  • Decision a b
  • 1 Payoff 1a Payoff 1b
  • 2 Payoff 2a Payoff 2b

Two states a and b One decision choose 1
or 2 Four possible outcomes Payoff 1a, 1b, 2a,
2b
9
Payoff Table
  • State Of Nature Projector..
  • Decision Works Is Broken
  • no backup OK cancel class
  • have backup OK OK

Two states Projector Works or Projector
Broken One decision choose no backup or have
backup Possible outcomes OK or cancel class
10
Payoff Table Single Coin Toss
  • States Of Nature
  • Decision heads tails
  • choose heads win lose
  • choose tails lose win

11
Payoff Table Triple Coin Toss
Eight States Of Nature
Decision
12
Payoff Table?Blackjack with 4 decks of cards
208 cards 2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,J,Q,K,A
13
Payoff Table Snowboarding?
14
Situation Analysis
?
  • Example Two possible states of nature
  • Class Quiz Today OR No Class Quiz Today
  • You are uncertain which state of nature will
    occur
  • You have no control over the state of nature
  • Draw the payoff table

15
Payoff Table
  • States Of Nature
  • Decision quiz no quiz
  • go to class Payoff 1a Payoff 1b
  • skip class Payoff 2a Payoff 2b

Two states quiz or no quiz One decision
choose go to class or skip Four possible
outcomes Payoff 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b
16
Payoff Table Education
http//www.census.gov/
17
Payoff Table Education
  • Average Salary is not accurate enough as a
  • predictor, need to factor additional
  • states of nature into the decision process.
  • There are many, lets pick two
  • Good Economy, Growing Educational Demand
  • Bad Economy, No Educational Demand

18
Payoff Table Education
  • Lets also simplify the decisions to be made to
    one
  • of three
  • Go on to obtain MBA
  • Status quo, complete bachelors degree
  • Drop out of school now
  • and then look at several possible decision
    schemes.

19
Education Plan Payoff Table Effect on Lifetime
Earnings
STATES OF NATURE Good Economy Poor
Economy DECISION Growing Educational Demand No
Educational Demand
Go on to MBA 2,200,000 800,000 Maintain
status quo 1,800,000 1,000,000 complete
graduation Drop out now 1,000,000 900,000
20
Decision Making Criteria Under Uncertainty
  • Maximax criterion
  • Choose decision with the maximum of the maximum
    payoffs
  • Maximin criterion
  • Choose decision with the maximum of the minimum
    payoffs
  • Minimax regret criterion
  • Choose decision with the minimum of the maximum
    regrets for each alternative

21
Decision Making Criteria Under Uncertainty
  • Hurwicz criterion
  • Choose decision in which decision payoffs are
    weighted by a coefficient of optimism, ?
  • Coefficient of optimism (?) is a measure of a
    decision makers optimism, from 0 (completely
    pessimistic) to 1 (completely optimistic)
  • Equal likelihood (La Place) criterion
  • Choose decision in which each state of nature is
    weighted equally

22
Education Plan Payoff Table Effect on Lifetime
Earnings
STATES OF NATURE Good Economy Poor
Economy DECISION Growing Educational Demand No
Educational Demand
MBA 2,200,000 800,000 Maintain status
quo 1,800,000 1,000,000 Drop out
now 1,000,000 900,000
Maximax Solution MBA 2,200,000 ?
Maximum Status quo 1,800,000 Drop out
1,000,000 Decision go for MBA
23
Education Plan Payoff Table Effect on Lifetime
Earnings
STATES OF NATURE Good Economy Poor
Economy DECISION Growing Educational Demand No
Educational Demand
MBA 2,200,000 800,000 Maintain status
quo 1,800,000 1,000,000 Drop out
now 1,000,000 900,000
Maximin Solution MBA 800,000 Status
quo 1,000,000 ? Maximum Drop out now
900,000 Decision Status quo, complete college
24
Education Plan Payoff Table Effect on Lifetime
Earnings
STATES OF NATURE Good Economy Poor
Economy DECISION Growing Educational Demand No
Educational Demand
MBA 2,200,000 800,000 Maintain status
quo 1,800,000 1,000,000 Drop out
now 1,000,000 900,000
Minimax Regret Solution 2.2M - 2.2M 0
1M-800K 200K 2.2M - 1.8M 400K
1M-1M 0 2.2M - 1M 1.2M 1M -
900K 100K
MBA 200,000 ? Minimum Status quo
400,000 Drop out now 1,200,000 Decision go
for MBA
25
Education Plan Payoff Table Effect on Lifetime
Earnings
STATES OF NATURE Good Economy Poor
Economy DECISION Growing Educational Demand No
Educational Demand
MBA 2,200,000 800,000 Maintain status
quo 1,800,000 1,000,000 Drop out
now 1,000,000 900,000
Hurwicz Criteria Coefficient of optimism ?
0.3 1 - ? 0.7 MBA 2.2M(0.3)
800,000(0.7) 1,220,000 Status quo
1.8M(0.3) 1M(0.7) 1,240,000 ? Maximum Drop
out 1M(0.3) 900,000(0.7)
930,000 Decision Status quo, complete college
26
Decision Making with Probabilities
  • Risk involves assigning probabilities to states
    of nature
  • Expected value is a weighted average of decision
    outcomes in which each future state of nature is
    assigned a probability of occurrence

27
Expected Value
where
xi outcome i p(xi) probability of outcome i
28
(No Transcript)
29
Expected Value Example Coin Toss
  • Tops a coin, two outcomes
  • heads probability 0.5 x1 1.00
  • tails probability 0.5 x2 0

p(x1) 1 p(x2)0
0.5 1 0.50 0.50
30
Expected Value
100 chance of 10 chance of 1 chance of 0.1
chance of
0.01
31
Expected Value Examples
EV (lottery) 50 investment EV (slot machine)
95 investment EV (savings account) 102
investment EV (cert of deposit) 105
investment EV (stock market) 110 investment
32
Expected Value 10 investment-per-week
EV (lottery) 50 investment 10/week loses
2,600 / ten years EV (stock market) 110
investment 10/week gains 3,916 / ten years EV
Difference of 6,516
33
Education Plan Payoff Table Effect on Lifetime
Earnings
STATES OF NATURE Good Economy Poor
Economy DECISION Growing Educational Demand No
Educational Demand
MBA 2,200,000 800,000 Maintain status
quo 1,800,000 1,000,000 Drop out
now 1,000,000 900,000
Expected Value p(good) 0.70 p(poor)
0.30 EV(MBA) 2.2M(0.7)
800K(0.3) 1,780,000 ? Maximum EV(status quo)
1.8M(0.7) 1M(0.3) 1,560,000 EV(drop
out) 1,000K(0.7) 900K(0.3)
970,000 Decision MBA
34
Decision Analysis
  • Weve dealt with states of nature, and
    probabilities of outcomes
  • What about situations that are far more complex?
    Where there are more steps in a situation
    analysis?

35
Sequential Decision Trees
  • A graphical method for analyzing decision
    situations that require a sequence of decisions
    over time
  • Decision tree consists of
  • Square nodes - indicating decision points
  • Circles nodes - indicating states of nature
  • Arcs - connecting nodes

36
Simple Decision Tree
OUTCOME
DECISION POINT
ARCS CONNECTING NODES
OUTCOME
37
Simple Decision Tree
STATE or OUTCOME A
probability ofoutcome A
DECISION POINT
probability ofoutcome B
STATE or OUTCOME B
38
Sequential Decision Tree
C
A
DECISION POINT
D
B
39
Sequential Decision Tree Education Decisions
yes
MBA
MBA?
yes
Stay in school?
BS/BA
no
no
HS diploma
40
Decision Tree
?
  • In the early morning, you first decide whether
  • or not to go to school.
  • If you choose to go to school, you then decide
  • whether or not to attend class.
  • Draw the decision tree.

41
Sequential Decision Tree Go to school class?
yes
Go to class?
yes
Go to school?
no
no
42
Sequential Decision Tree
Decision needed Need to get to class, which
vehicle to drive?States of nature traffic or
no traffic
STATES OF NATURE Traffic No Traffic driving
time driving time
Drive F250 to school 40 minutes
30 minutes Drive 986 to school
35 minutes 25
minutes
43
Sequential Decision Tree
traffic
35 mins
P0.1
986
P0.9
25 mins
no traffic
What to drive?
40 mins
traffic
B
P0.1
F250
P0.9
30 mins
no traffic
44
Sequential Decision Tree
35 mins
traffic
P0.1
986
EV986
P0.9
25 mins
no traffic
What to drive?
40 mins
traffic
B
P0.1
F250
EVF250
P0.9
30 mins
no traffic
45
Sequential Decision Tree
traffic
35 mins
P0.1
EV986 0.135 0.925EV986 26 minutes
986
P0.9
25 mins
no traffic
What to drive?
40 mins
traffic
B
P0.1
EVF250 0.140 0.930EV250 31 minutes
F250
P0.9
30 mins
no traffic
46
Sequential Decision Tree
Additional states of nature temperature warm or
cold
STATES OF NATURE Cold Warm lt60o gt60o
F250 starting time 5
minutes zero 986 starting time
zero zero
47
Sequential Decision Tree
traffic
35 mins
P0.1
986
P0.9
25 mins
no traffic
What to drive?
0
gt60o
P0.5
F250
temp?
P0.5
5 minsto start
lt60o
48
Sequential Decision Tree
traffic
35 mins
P0.1
EV986 0.135 0.925EV986 26 minutes
986
P0.9
25 mins
no traffic
What to drive?
0
gt60o
P0.5
F250
temp?
P0.5
5 minsto start
lt60o
EVF250 0.550.1400.930 0.50.1400.930
EVF250 33.5 minutes
49
Expected Value Class Experiment
EV 1 .01 0.01
guaranteed P1.00
3 in a row P?
3H/T
EV ? .08 0.01
50
Expected Value Class Experiment
EV 1 .10 0.10
guaranteed P1.00
3 in a row P?
3H/T
EV ? .80 0.10
51
Expected Value Class Experiment
EV 1.00
guaranteed P1.00
3 in a row P?
3H
EV 1.00
52
Decision Tree
?
  • In the early morning, you first decide whether or
    not
  • to go to school. Lets assume that you attend 9
    days
  • out of 10.
  • If you choose to go to school, you then decide
    whether
  • or not to attend class. Lets assume that you
    attend 9
  • classes out of 10 on days when in school.
  • Assume there is a always quiz. If youre there,
    you
  • get a perfect 10. If you miss, you get a zero.
  • What is your expected quiz score?

53
Sequential Decision Tree Education Decisions
Expected score Pin class x 10 pts Pnot in
class x 0 pts
Expected score (0.81)(10) (0.19)(0) 8.1
points
P0.81
yes
P0.9
Go to class?
yes
P0.9
Go to school?
P0.1
P0.09
no
P0.1
no
P0.1
54
2 volunteers needed
55
Sequential Decision Tree
guaranteed P1.00
H
coin toss
3H
T
56
Sequential Decision Tree
guaranteed P1.00
P?
H
P0.50
P?
coin toss
3H
P0.50
T
57
Sequential Decision Tree
guaranteed P1.00
EV 1
P?
EV ½0.10 ½?1
½?10 EV 1.1125
H
P0.50
P?
coin toss
3H
P0.50
T
EV 0.51 0.50
EV 1.6125
58
Informal feedback
  • Write a 2 minute journal to be handed in
    immediately
  • The journal should briefly summarize
  • Major points learned
  • Areas not understood or requiring clarification
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