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Super Crunchers: Why Thinking-by-Numbers Is the New Way to Be Smart PDF

264 Pages·2007·2.12 MB·English
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u.s. $25.00 Canada $32.00 W hy would a casino try to stop you from losing? How can a mathematical formula find your future spouse? Would you know if statistical analysis blackballed you from a job you wanted? SUPER CRUNCHERS WHY THINKING-BY-NUMBERS Is THE NEW WAY TO BE SMART Today, number crunching affects your life in ways you might never imagine. In this lively and groundbreaking new book, economist Ian Ayres shows how today's best and brightest organizations are analyzing massive databases at lightning speed to provide greater insights into human behavior. They are the Super Crunchers. From Internet sites like Google and Amazon that know your tastes better than you do, to a physician's diagnosis and your child's education, to boardrooms and government agencies, this new breed of decision makers is calling the shots. And they are delivering staggeringly accurate results. How can a football coach evaluate a player without ever seeing him play? Want to know whether the price of an airline ticket will go up or down before you buy? How can a formula outpredict wine experts in determining the best vintages? Super crunchers have the answers. In this brave new world of equation versus expertise, Ayres shows us the benefits and risks, who loses and who wins, and how super crunching can be used to help, not manipulate, us. (continued on back flap) (continued from front flap) Gone are the days of relying solely on intuition to make decisions. No businessperson, consumer, or student who wants to stay ahead of the curve should make another keystroke without reading Super Crunchers. IAN AYRES, an econometrician and lawyer, is the William K. Townsend Professor at Yale Law School and a profes sor at Yale's School of Management. He is a regular commen tator on public radio's Marketplace and a columnist for Forbes magazine. He is currently the editor of the Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization and has written eight books and more than a hundred articles. Jacket design by Tom McKeveny Visit our website at www.bantamdell.com. Bantam Books lUhy Thinking-by-numbers Is the new lUay to Be Smart IAN AYRES BHRTHm BOOKS NEW YORK LONDON TORONTO SYDNEY AUCKLAND SUPER CRUNCHERS A Bantam Book f September 2007 Published by Bamam Dell A Division of Random House, Inc. New York, New York All rights reserved Copyright © 2007 by Ian Ayres Book design by Ellen Cipriano Bamam Books is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc., and the colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ayres, Ian. Super crunchers: why thinking-by-numbers is the new way to be smanfIan Ayres. p.cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-553-80540-6 (hardcover) 1. Statistics. 2. Regression analysis. 3. Sampling (Statistics) 4. Standard deviations. I. Tide. HA29.A86 2007 519.5--dc22 2007013804 Primed in the United States of America Published simultaneously in Canada www.bamamdell.com 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 BVG conTEnTS Introduction: The Rise of the Super Crunchers 1 1 Who's Doing Your Thinking for You? 19 2 Creating Your Own Data 46 with the Flip of a Coin 3 Government by Chance 64 4 How Should Physicians Treat 81 Evidence-Based Medicine? 5 Experts Versus Equations lO3 6 Why Now? 129 7 Are We Having Fun Yet? 156 8 The Future of Intuition 192 (and Expertise) Acknowledgments 219 Notes 221 Index 249 InTRODllCTlon The Rise of the Super Crunchers Orley Ashenfelter really loves wine: "When a good red wine ages," he says, "something quite magical happens." Yet Orley isn't just obsessed with how wine tastes. He wants to know about the forces behind great and not-so-great wines. "When you buy a good red wine," he says, "you're always making an investment, in the sense that it's probably going to be better later. And what you'd like to know is not what it's worth now, but what it's going to be worth in the future. Even if you're not going to sell it-even if you're going to drink it. If you want to know, 'How much pleasure am I going to get by delay ing my gratification?' That's an endlessly fasci nating topic." It's a topic that has consumed a fair amount of his life for the last twenty-five years. In his day job, Orley crunches numbers. He uses statistics to extract hidden information from large datasets. As an economist at Princeton, he's 2 • SUPER CRUNCHERS looked at the wages of identical twins to estimate the impact of an ex tra year of school. He's estimated how much states value a statistical life by looking at differences in speed limits. For years he edited the leading economics journal in the United States, the American Economic Review. Ashenfelter is a tall man with a bushy mane of white hair and a booming, friendly voice that tends to dominate a room. No milque toast he. He's the kind of guy who would quickly disabuse you of any stereotype you might have that number crunchers are meek, retiring souls. I've seen Orley stride around a classroom, gutting the reasoning behind a seminar paper with affable exuberance. When he starts out his remarks with over-the-top praise, watch out. What's really gotten Drley in trouble is crunching numbers to as sess the quality of Boroeaux wines. Instead of using the "swishing and spitting" approach of wine gurus like Robert Parker, Orley has used statistics to find out what characteristics of vintage are associated with higher or lower auction prices. "It's really a no-brainer," he said. "Wine is an agricultural product dramatically affected by the weather from year to year." Using decades of weather data from France's Bordeaux region, Drley found that low levels of harvest rain and high average summer temperatures pro duce the greatest wines. The statistical fit on data from 1952 through 1980 was remarkably tight for the red wines of Burgundy as well as Bordeaux. Bordeaux are best when the grapes are ripe and their juice is con centrated. In years when the summer is particularly hot, grapes get ripe, which lowers their acidity. And, in years when there is below average rainfall, the fruit gets concentrated. So it's in the hot and dry years that you tend to get the legendary vintages. Ripe grapes make supple (low-acid) wines. Concentrated grapes make full-bodied wines. He's had the temerity to reduce his theory to a formula: Wine quality = 12.145 + 0.00117 winter rainfall + 0.0614 average growing season temperature - 0.00386 harvest rainfall INTRODUCTION • 3 That's right. By plugging the weather statistics for any year into this equation, Ashenfelter can predict the general quality of any vin tage. With a slightly fancier equation, he can make more precise pre dictions for the vintage quality at more than 100 Chateaus. "It may seem a bit mathematical," he acknowledges, "but this is exactly the way the French ranked their vineyards back in the famous 1855 classi fications." Traditional wine critics have not embraced Ashenfelter's data driven predictions. Britain's WIne magazine said "the formula's self evident silliness invite[s} disrespect." William Sokolin, a New York wine merchant, said the Bordeaux wine industry's view of Ashenfelter's work ranges "somewhere between violent and hysterical." At times, he's been scorned by trade members. When Ashenfelter gave a wine presentation at Christie's Wine Department, dealers in the back openly hissed at his presentation. Maybe the world's most influential wine writer (and publisher of The WIne Advocate), Robert Parker, colorfully called Ashenfelter "an absolute total sham." Even though Ashenfelter is one of the most re spected quantitative economists in the world, to Parker his approach "is really a Neanderthal way of looking at wine. It's so absurd as to be laughable." Parker dismisses the possibility that a mathematical equa tion could help identify wines that actually taste good: ''I'd hate to be invited to his house to drink wine." Parker says Ashenfelter "is rather like a movie critic who never goes to see the movie but tells you how good it is based on the actors and the director." Parker has a point. Just as it's more accurate to see the movie, shouldn't it be more accurate to actually taste the wine? There's just one catch: for months and months there is no wine to taste. Bordeaux and Burgundies spend eighteen to twenty-four months in oak casks before they are set aside for aging in bottles. Experts, like Parker, have to wait four months just to have a first taste after the wine is placed in barrels. And even then it's a rather foul, fermenting mixture. It's not clear that tasting this undrinkable early wine gives tasters very

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Why would a casino try and stop you from losing? How can a mathematical formula find your future spouse? Would you know if a statistical analysis blackballed you from a job you wanted? Today, number crunching affects your life in ways you might never imagine. In this lively and groundbreaking new bo
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