Systemic Testing on Bradley-Terry Model against Nonlinear Ranking Hierarchy
Author(s) -
Aaron B. Shev,
Kevin Fujii,
Fushing Hsieh,
Brenda McCowan
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0115367
Subject(s) - hierarchy , ranking (information retrieval) , deviance (statistics) , statistic , computer science , test statistic , dominance hierarchy , dominance (genetics) , mathematics , statistics , statistical hypothesis testing , econometrics , artificial intelligence , psychology , social psychology , biology , economics , biochemistry , market economy , gene , aggression
We take a system point of view toward constructing any power or ranking hierarchy onto a society of human or animal players. The most common hierarchy is the linear ranking, which is habitually used in nearly all real-world problems. A stronger version of linear ranking via increasing and unvarying winning potentials, known as Bradley-Terry model, is particularly popular. Only recently non-linear ranking hierarchy is discussed and developed through recognition of dominance information contents beyond direct dyadic win-and-loss. We take this development further by rigorously arguing for the necessity of accommodating system's global pattern information contents, and then introducing a systemic testing on Bradley-Terry model. Our test statistic with an ensemble based empirical distribution favorably compares with the Deviance test equipped with a Chi-squared asymptotic approximation. Several simulated and real data sets are analyzed throughout our development.
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