- published: 02 Dec 2014
- views: 11628
Pairwise comparison generally is any process of comparing entities in pairs to judge which of each entity is preferred, or has a greater amount of some quantitative property, or whether or not the two entities are identical. The method of pairwise comparison is used in the scientific study of preferences, attitudes, voting systems, social choice, public choice, and multiagent AI systems. In psychology literature, it is often referred to as paired comparison.
Prominent psychometrician L. L. Thurstone first introduced a scientific approach to using pairwise comparisons for measurement in 1927, which he referred to as the law of comparative judgment. Thurstone linked this approach to psychophysical theory developed by Ernst Heinrich Weber and Gustav Fechner. Thurstone demonstrated that the method can be used to order items along a dimension such as preference or importance using an interval-type scale.
If an individual or organization expresses a preference between two mutually distinct alternatives, this preference can be expressed as a pairwise comparison. If the two alternatives are x and y, the following are the possible pairwise comparisons:
Liberal Arts Math - 15.1 - Pairwise comparisons method
Pairwise Comparison Charts 2: Setting Up and Running Them
MTH109 Mod 4: Voting Methods: Pairwise Comparison
ANOVA - Pairwise Comparisons
ENGN2225 OC - Pairwise Analysis
Pairwise Comparison Charts - Safe Soap Student Team
Testing Means: All Pairwise Comparisons Among Means
Pairwise Comparison IIA
Copeland's method / Pairwise comparison 1
Survey: Pairwise Comparison Method of Voting
How to interpret the Pairwise Comparisons Table produced by SPSS for a 2-way interaction in a 2 x 3 ANOVA.
The pair-wise analysis is a simple tool to rank competing design requirements. Each requirement is tabulated for importance using a binary comparison. This will help your understanding of which requirements are more important than others.
Comparing Each Mean with Each other Mean
This video describes the Pairwise Comparison Method of Voting. Each pair of candidates gets compared. The winner of each comparison is awarded a point. And the candidate with the most "points" is the winner. If there is a tie in the comparison, then each candidate gets 1/2 a point.