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Data & Modeling Decisions

Data & Modeling Decisions. MSC 636 Winter 2003. Problem Solving. Relies on problem definition Difference between current and desired state of affairs Problem statement Current state Desired state Key objective Problem scope to match resources & priorities. Evolution toward DSS.

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Data & Modeling Decisions

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  1. Data & Modeling Decisions MSC 636 Winter 2003

  2. Problem Solving • Relies on problem definition • Difference between current and desired state of affairs • Problem statement • Current state • Desired state • Key objective • Problem scope to match resources & priorities

  3. Evolution toward DSS • Intersection of data processing and management science • Database management systems • large amount of data • data independence • flexible, easy access by non-programmers • Modeling • Sopisticated, accurate depictions of reality • Go beyond simple, static models • Use computers to make modeling more accessible, interactive, and meaningful

  4. Components Interface Network Data Models Knowledge

  5. Internal data Shared sources TPS/operational data Financial Accounting Production HRM Data warehouses/data marts Private/personal data External data Particularly for EIS Commercial/ subscription databases Industry data Governmental/agency/public access data Primary data collection Sources of Data

  6. Timeliness Sufficiency Detail/aggregation Understandability Bias Relevance Comparability Reliability Redundancy Cost efficiency Quantifiability Format Data/Information Quality Issues

  7. Models/Modeling • Simplified representation of reality • Model building (modeling) • Study environment • Define problem structure • Choose or create models • Identify important variables & relationships • Express in mathematically, logically, or graphically

  8. Problem Structure • Choices • Multiple alternatives • Objectives • Goal of decision making • Objective criteria of success • Uncertainties • Different than choice • Characteristic of all good problems

  9. Components of Influence Diagrams and Decision Trees Represents relationships & sequence of context Decision Uncertainty Objective

  10. B A B A Event A outcome is relevant to probability of Event B outcome Outcome of Event A is known when making Decision B B B A A Decision A is necessary to estimate probability of Event B Decision A is made prior to Decision B Relevance Arrows (arcs) in Influence Diagrams Uncertainties become events after they happen

  11. WinContest Win large return on wager EnterContest Lose wager Lose Contest Lose/Gain nothing Do Not EnterContest Simple Decision Tree • More decision detail; predicted outcomes • Rules • Singular • Mutually exclusive & exhaustive • Complete, sequential event paths

  12. Decision Table • Tabular way of representing decision logic (rather than sequencing) • Multiple criteria • May be used in conjunction with decision trees & influence diagrams

  13. Uncertainty Price goes up Gain Buy Stock Loss Price goes down Lose/Gain nothing Decision Objective Do Not Buy Stock Basic Risky Decision

  14. Basic Risky Policy Uncertainty Decision Objective Basic Risky Decision with Multiple Objectives Objective 1 Uncertainty Total Satisfaction Objective 2 Decision Objective n Variations of Basic Risky Decision Model

  15. Objective 1 Objective 2 Total Satisfaction Decision Objective n Multiple Objective, No-Risk Decision

  16. Uncertainty t3 Uncertainty t1 Uncertainty t2 Uncertainty tn Total Satisfaction Decision t1 Decision t2 Decision t3 Decision tn Objective t1 Objective t2 Objective t3 Objective tn Multiple-Period Sequential Decision

  17. Model Characteristics • Time Dimension • Static • Dynamic • Methodology (type) • Representational • Abstract • Conceptual

  18. Representational • Iconic/scale • Replicas • Model airplanes, bridges, production lines • Measured drawings • Maps, photographs • Analog • Symbolizes or acts like reality • Organization chart, histograms, flow chart, time lines • EKG readouts, lie detector results • Blueprints

  19. Abstract Models • Deterministic • Static, algorithmic models • Optimization • Stochastic • Probabilistic statistics • Estimated parameters • Regression, time series, game theory, etc.

  20. Abstract Models (cont) • Simulation • Descriptive rather than normative • Predicts outcomes of interaction between environment & series of decision alternatives • Effective communication • Risks, environmental impacts, interactions, training, problem identification • Costly & specialized

  21. Simulation Example • Lining up for Santa • Using random numbers & probabilities (Monte Carlo) • Observe environment • Generate random number to mimic nature • Outcome: Long lines are possible, but not certain • Observations • No optimal solution • Repetition increases confidence • Better than trial & error with reality

  22. Conceptual Models • Mathematical models • Too costly • Too simple • Not available • Drawing from experience & analogies • Structuring tools useful • Decomposing • Organizing relationships • Considering probabilities associated with uncertainties

  23. Multiple Criteria Decision Table • Predict grade • Complete decision table • Are the predictions different? • Why? • Which grade do you want to bet on?

  24. Probabilities • Methods for determining • Long-run frequency • Observation of large numbers • Subjective • Degree of belief (expert based?) • Subjective approaches • Direct • Odds/comparison forecasting

  25. Calibration, Sensitivity, Value • Accuracy of probability estimates • Self-awareness of ability to make accurate predictions • Tendency toward over-confidence • Highly sensitivecareful of error • Insensitivedrop for parsimony • ValueHow much time & money should you spend?

  26. Factors Affecting the Selection of a Forecasting Technique • Problem Structure • Complexity & size • Precision required • Availability • DSS designer preference

  27. Models in DSS • Essential in most • Model-based vs. data-based • Simple or complex • Standard or custom-made • Single or multiple

  28. Model Management • Spreadsheet as model mgt tool • User interaction with models • Easy & flexible input • Understandable output (vary by user) • Use system intelligence to prompt (passive/active) or automate actions • Balance flexibility/control/ease of use • Default with option to change • Default by user profile, dept., level

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