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Article

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Title

Probabilistic ordinal regression methods for multiple criteria sorting admitting certain and uncertain preferences

Authors

[ 1 ] Instytut Informatyki, Wydział Informatyki i Telekomunikacji, Politechnika Poznańska | [ P ] employee

Scientific discipline (Law 2.0)

[2.3] Information and communication technology

Year of publication

2023

Published in

European Journal of Operational Research

Journal year: 2023 | Journal volume: vol. 311 | Journal number: no. 2

Article type

scientific article

Publication language

english

Keywords
EN
  • Decision analysis
  • Ordinal classification
  • Bayesian inference
  • Stochastic acceptability analysis
  • Indirect preference information
Abstract

EN We propose a family of probabilistic ordinal regression methods for multiple criteria sorting. They employ an additive value function model to aggregate the performances on multiple criteria and the threshold-based procedure to derive the class assignments of alternatives. The Decision Makers (DMs) can provide certain and uncertain assignment examples concerning a subset of reference alternatives, expressing the confidence levels using linguistic descriptions. On the one hand, we introduce Bayesian Ordinal Regression to derive a posterior distribution over a set of all potential sorting models by defining a likelihood for the provided preference information and specifying a prior of the preference model. This distribution emphasizes the potential differences in the models’ abilities to reconstruct the DM’s classification examples and thus is robust to the DM’s potential cognitive biases in her judgments. We also develop a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm to summarize the posterior distribution of the preference model. On the other hand, we adapt Subjective Stochastic Ordinal Regression to sorting problems. It builds a probability distribution over the space of all value functions and class thresholds compatible with the DM’s certain holistic judgments. The ambiguity in representing incomplete and potentially uncertain preference information by the assumed sorting model is quantified using class acceptability indices. We investigate the performance and robustness of the introduced approaches through an extensive experimental study involving real-world datasets. We also compare them against novel methods based on mathematical programming that handle potential inconsistencies in uncertain preferences in the traditional way by minimizing the misclassification error or the number of misclassified reference alternatives.

Date of online publication

18.05.2023

Pages (from - to)

596 - 616

DOI

10.1016/j.ejor.2023.05.007

URL

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S037722172300351X

Ministry points / journal

140

Impact Factor

6

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