1.decision Analysis
1.decision Analysis
Decision Analysis
is a combination of an alternative action and a state of nature Value can be monetary or otherwise
Decision Analysis
Certainty
Decision
Maker knows with certainty what the state of nature will be - only one possible state of nature Maker knows all possible states of nature, but does not know probability of occurrence
Uncertainty / Ignorance
Decision
Risk
Decision
Maker knows all possible states of nature, and can assign probability of occurrence for each state
$ $
$ 2,100,000 $ 900,000
$ 1,200,000
Maximax Select the strategy with the highest possible return Maximin Select the strategy with the smallest possible loss LaPlace-Bayes All states of nature are equally likely to occur. Select alternative with best average payoff
Maximax:
The Optimistic Point of View
each decision by the maximum possible return associated with that decision (Note: if cost data is used, the minimum return is best) The decision that yields the maximum of these maximum returns (maximax) is then selected
consider the down side risk Ignores the possible losses from the selected alternative
Maximax Example
Kelly Construction
State of Nature Alternative Actions Build 50 Build 100 Build 150 Demand Low (50 units) Medium (100 units) High (150 units) 400,000 100,000 (200,000) 400,000 800,000 500,000 400,000 800,000 1,200,000 Maximax Criterion Max 400,000 800,000 1,200,000
Maximin:
The Pessimistic Point of View
each decision by the minimum possible return associated with the decision The decision that yields the maximum value of the minimum returns (maximin) is selected
Maximin
Kelly Construction
State of Nature Alternative Actions Build 50 Build 100 Build 150 Demand Low (50 units) Medium (100 units) High (150 units) 400,000 100,000 (200,000) 400,000 800,000 500,000 400,000 800,000 1,200,000 Maximin Criterion Min 400,000 100,000 (200,000)
the alternative with the highest (long term) expected return weighted average of the possible returns for each alternative, with the probabilities used as weights
Expected Return
State of Nature Alternative Actions Build 50 Build 100 Build 150 Probability Demand Low (50 units) Medium (100 units) High (150 units) 400,000 100,000 (200,000) 0.2 400,000 800,000 500,000 0.5 400,000 800,000 1,200,000 0.3 Expected Return ER 400,000 660,000 570,000 1.0
EVPI measures how much better you could do on this decision if you could always know when each state of nature would occur, where:
EVUPI
= Expected Value Under Perfect Information (also called EVwPI, the EV with perfect information, or EVC, the EV under certainty) = Expected Value of the best action with imperfect information (also called EVBest ) = EVUPI EVUII
EVUII EVPI
EVPI tells you how much you are willing to pay for perfect information (or is the upper limit for what you would pay for additional imperfect information!)
Payoffs Alternatives Build 50 Build 100 Build 150 Probability Best Decision
States of Nature Low (50 units) Medium (100 units) 400000 400000 100000 800000 -200000 500000 0.2 0.5 =MAX(B5:B7) =MAX(C5:C7)
Expected Return High (150 units) ER 400000 =SUMPRODUCT(B5:D5,B$8:D$8) 800000 =SUMPRODUCT(B6:D6,B$8:D$8) 1200000 =SUMPRODUCT(B7:D7,B$8:D$8) 0.3 =MAX(D5:D7) EVwPI = =SUMPRODUCT(B9:D9,B8:D8) EVBest = =MAX(E5:E7) EVPI = =E11-E12
P0 = Prob{demand = 0} = 0.1
P1 = Prob{demand = 1} = 0.3
P2 = Prob{demand = 2} = 0.4
P3 = Prob{demand = 3} = 0.2
Each of these four values represent the states of nature. The number of papers ordered is the decision. The returns or payoffs are as follows:
Decision 0
1
2 3
-40
-80 -120
35
-5 -45
-15
70 30
-65
20 105
Payoff = 75(# papers sold) 40(# papers ordered) 50(unmet demand) Where 75 = selling price 40 = cost of buying a paper 50 = cost of loss of goodwill
ER2 = -80(0.1) 5(0.3) + 70(0.4) + 20(0.2) = 22.5 ER3 = -120(0.1) 45(0.3) + 30(0.4) 105(0.2) = 7.5
State of Nature (Demand) Decision 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 -150 -65 20 105 ER -85 -12.5 22.5 7.5 0 -50 ERs, -100 Of these four -40 the maximum, 35 -15 choose -80 -120
-5
70
Prob.
0.1
0.3
0.4
0.2
State of Nature
Decision
0 1 2 3
0
0 -40 -80 -120
1
-50 35 -5 -45
2
-100 -15 70 30
3
-150 -65 20 105
Prob.
0.1
0.3
0.4
0.2
extremely conservative, or pessimistic, approach to making decisions. Maximin evaluates each decision by the minimum possible return associated with the decision. Then, the decision that yields the maximum value of the minimum returns (maximin) is selected.
So, using the 3 criteria, we made the following decisions regarding the newsvendor data:
Criteria
Maximin Cash Flow Expected Return Maximax Cash Flow
Decision
Order 1 paper Order 2 papers Order 3 papers
0.524
100
200
300
400
500
600 Dollars
To illustrate, first suppose you have $100 and someone gives you an additional $100. Note that your utility increases by