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Main Author: Coleman, Charles D.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.15136
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author Coleman, Charles D.
author_facet Coleman, Charles D.
contents The total loss function associated with a set of cross-sectional predictions, that is, estimates or forecasts, summarizes the set's overall accuracy. Its arguments are the individual cross-sectional units' loss functions. Under general assumptions, including impartiality, about the forms of the individual loss functions, and the specific assumptions that the total loss function is anonymous and monotonic, only the additive, multiplicative and L-type (with restrictions) total loss functions are found to be admissible. The first two total loss functions correspond to different interpretations of economic utility. An isomorphism exists between these two total loss functions. Thus, the additive total loss function can always be used. This isomorphism can also be used to explore the properties of various combinations of total and individual loss functions. Moreover, the additive loss function obeys the von Neumann-Morgenstern expected utility axioms.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_15136
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Total Loss Functions for Measuring the Accuracy of Nonnegative Cross-Sectional Predictions
Coleman, Charles D.
Methodology
Statistics Theory
91C05
The total loss function associated with a set of cross-sectional predictions, that is, estimates or forecasts, summarizes the set's overall accuracy. Its arguments are the individual cross-sectional units' loss functions. Under general assumptions, including impartiality, about the forms of the individual loss functions, and the specific assumptions that the total loss function is anonymous and monotonic, only the additive, multiplicative and L-type (with restrictions) total loss functions are found to be admissible. The first two total loss functions correspond to different interpretations of economic utility. An isomorphism exists between these two total loss functions. Thus, the additive total loss function can always be used. This isomorphism can also be used to explore the properties of various combinations of total and individual loss functions. Moreover, the additive loss function obeys the von Neumann-Morgenstern expected utility axioms.
title Total Loss Functions for Measuring the Accuracy of Nonnegative Cross-Sectional Predictions
topic Methodology
Statistics Theory
91C05
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.15136