Spearing, Harry and Tawn, Jonathan and Irons, David and Paulden, Tim (2023) Modeling Intransitivity in Pairwise Comparisons with Application to Baseball Data. Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics, 32 (4). pp. 1383-1392. ISSN 1061-8600
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
The seminal Bradley-Terry model exhibits transitivity, that is, the property that the probabilities of player A beating B and B beating C give the probability of A beating C, with these probabilities determined by a skill parameter for each player. Such transitive models do not account for different strategies of play between each pair of players, which gives rise to intransitivity. Various intransitive parametric models have been proposed but they lack the flexibility to cover the different strategies across n players, with the (Formula presented.) values of intransitivity modeled using (Formula presented.) parameters, while they are not parsimonious when the intransitivity is simple. We overcome their lack of adaptability by allocating each pair of players to one of a random number of K intransitivity levels, each level representing a different strategy. Our novel approach for the skill parameters involves having the n players allocated to a random number of (Formula presented.) distinct skill levels, to improve efficiency and avoid false rankings. Although we may have to estimate up to (Formula presented.) unknown parameters for (Formula presented.) we anticipate that in many practical contexts (Formula presented.). Our semiparametric model, which gives the Bradley-Terry model when (Formula presented.), is shown to have an improved fit relative to the Bradley-Terry, and the existing intransitivity models, in out-of-sample testing when applied to simulated and American League baseball data. Supplementary materials for the article areavailable online.