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A careful look at the importance of criteria and weights

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Abstract

We investigate the connection between weights, scales, and the importance of criteria, when a linear value function is assumed to be a suitable representation of a decision maker’s preferences. Our considerations are based on a simple two-criteria experiment, where the participants were asked to indicate which of the criteria was more important, and to pairwise compare a number of alternatives. We use the participants’ pairwise choices to estimate the weights for the criteria in such a way that the linear value function explains the choices to the extent possible. More specifically, we study two research questions: (1) is it possible to find a general scaling principle that makes the rank order of the importance of criteria consistent with the rank order of the magnitudes of the weights, and (2) how good is a simple, direct method of asking the decision maker to “provide” weights for the criteria compared to our estimation procedure. Our results imply that there is reason to question two common beliefs, namely that the values of the weights would reflect the importance of criteria, and that people could reliably “provide” such weights without estimation.

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Notes

  1. “Announced importance of criteria” simply means decision maker’s statements such as “criterion A is more important than criterion B”.

  2. A more general preference model is described in Greco et al. (2001).

  3. If X i dominates X j ,i,jN⇒(X i ,X j )∈P.

  4. Dominance relations can be ignored.

  5. For more details on “Non-Archimedean”, see Arnold et al. (1998).

  6. Currently Aalto University, School of Business.

  7. It would have been difficult to use participants who did not respond to all questions, because we needed the first ten responses to estimate the weights; the remaining responses were predicted.

  8. We adopted this useful scale from Saaty (1980).

  9. By “optimal weights” we mean weights implied by an “optimal” scale.

  10. By “psychological dependence” we understand the situation, when the criteria are perceived to be similar, in other words to belong to the same class of criteria. For example, different recreational outdoor activity possibilities, such as fishing, hunting, etc., are understood to belong to the same class of criteria.

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Correspondence to Jyrki Wallenius.

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The research was supported by the Academy of Finland (Grant numbers 133387 and 253583).

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Korhonen, P.J., Silvennoinen, K., Wallenius, J. et al. A careful look at the importance of criteria and weights. Ann Oper Res 211, 565–578 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10479-012-1307-y

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