anonystu
J'Accuse PirateCat!
Monte posted in a rave this morning about the ENnies:
People point out that the drawback is that you can vote 10 for your favorite product and 1 for all the rest, skewing the vote. I don't think that will actually be too much of a problem -- and it's something the moderators can watch for, in any case. The potential problem that I see is that the system favors products with fewer votes. For instance, a product that gets 99 votes of 7 and one vote of 8 receives an average rating of 7.01, which beats out a product that gets 5,000 votes of 7, generating an average of a straight 7. (Again, this assumes my understanding of the process is correct.) But that's only a potential scenario.
I posted in return on that message board:
Monte makes a very good point that the system may not account for different numbers of votes, but this is easily rectified by using a bayesian estimate, the system that you've most likely run into as the system that the IMDB uses to determine what the top-user-rated movies of all time are:
Check out this, for a not too technical explanation:
www.wowwebdesigns.com/formula.php
The technique is quite simple to explain: entries with low amount of votes are pulled towards the mean, because you should be less confident that those are representative of true preference, instead of just random sampling.
It's a quite easy solution to that issue: I'll email Morrus about it, but hey, you can talk to him too! I don't think this is a change that should happen this year: switching voting schemes mid-vote is as shady as it comes, but it's a good thing going forward.
So are the ENnies using a bayesian estimate formula to determine the winners? What do people think of switching to this method if it's not being used?
People point out that the drawback is that you can vote 10 for your favorite product and 1 for all the rest, skewing the vote. I don't think that will actually be too much of a problem -- and it's something the moderators can watch for, in any case. The potential problem that I see is that the system favors products with fewer votes. For instance, a product that gets 99 votes of 7 and one vote of 8 receives an average rating of 7.01, which beats out a product that gets 5,000 votes of 7, generating an average of a straight 7. (Again, this assumes my understanding of the process is correct.) But that's only a potential scenario.
I posted in return on that message board:
Monte makes a very good point that the system may not account for different numbers of votes, but this is easily rectified by using a bayesian estimate, the system that you've most likely run into as the system that the IMDB uses to determine what the top-user-rated movies of all time are:
Check out this, for a not too technical explanation:
www.wowwebdesigns.com/formula.php
The technique is quite simple to explain: entries with low amount of votes are pulled towards the mean, because you should be less confident that those are representative of true preference, instead of just random sampling.
It's a quite easy solution to that issue: I'll email Morrus about it, but hey, you can talk to him too! I don't think this is a change that should happen this year: switching voting schemes mid-vote is as shady as it comes, but it's a good thing going forward.
So are the ENnies using a bayesian estimate formula to determine the winners? What do people think of switching to this method if it's not being used?