'Expert' Predictions Often Fall Short, Says Grawemeyer World Order Winner

Mon Dec 3, 2007 9:00pm EST
 
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LOUISVILLE, Ky., Dec. 3 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Political pundits should be
held accountable for the predictions they make, says the winner of the 2008
University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order.

Philip Tetlock, a University of California, Berkeley, professor of business
administration and political science, earned the prize for ideas he set forth
in his 2005 book, "Expert Political Judgment: How Good Is It? How Can We
Know?"

A great many political forecasts turn out to be inaccurate, which is troubling
since government officials routinely rely on them to make decisions, Tetlock
says.

In a 20-year study of 27,000 predictions by 284 political experts, Tetlock
found those who take a big-picture approach are more often correct than those
who operate from a single perspective. However, all political "experts" doing
forecasts need to receive more training, do more research and be held
accountable for their advice, he says.

Award judges called the book "a landmark study that changes our understanding
of the way experts perform when they make judgments about world politics."

The work, published by Princeton University press, was selected from among 50
entries from seven countries.

Tetlock has been a professor of business administration and political science
at the University of California, Berkeley since 2001. He holds a doctorate in
psychology from Yale University and a master's degree in psychology from the
University of British Columbia. His Grawemeyer Award-winning book also won the
American Political Science Association's Woodrow Wilson Award in 2005.

The Grawemeyer Foundation at U of L annually awards $1 million -- $200,000
each -- for works in music composition, world order, psychology, education and
religion. Winners of the other 2008 Grawemeyer awards also are being announced
this week.

For more details or a photo of Tetlock, contact Denise Fitzpatrick at
502-852-6171 or denise.fitzpatrick@louisville.edu or see
www.grawemeyer.org.





SOURCE  University of Louisville

Denise Fitzpatrick of University of Louisville, +1-502-852-6171,
denise.fitzpatrick@louisville.edu

 

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