A common problem faced in statistical inference is drawing conclusions from paired comparisons, in which two objects compete and one is declared the victor. A probabilistic approach to such a problem is the Bradley-Terry model, first studied by Zermelo in 1929 and rediscovered by Bradley and Terry in 1952. One obvious area of application for such a model is sporting events, and in particular Major League Baseball. With this in mind, we describe a hierarchical Bayesian version of Bradley-Terry suitable for use in ranking and prediction problems, and compare results from these application domains to standard maximum likelihood approaches. Our Bayesian methods outperform the MLE-based analogues, while being simple to construct, implement, and interpret.
CITATION STYLE
Phelan, G. C., & Whelan, J. T. (2018). Hierarchical Bayesian Bradley–Terry for applications in Major League Baseball. Mathematics for Application, 7(1), 71–84. https://doi.org/10.13164/ma.2018.07
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