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Pairwise comparison

About: Pairwise comparison is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6804 publications have been published within this topic receiving 174081 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new estimation method of missing values in an incomplete fuzzy preference relation which is based on the modelling of consistency of preferences via a representable uninorm is presented.
Abstract: Dealing with incomplete information is an important problem in decision making. In this paper, we present a short discussion on this topic and a new estimation method of missing values in an incomplete fuzzy preference relation which is based on the modelling of consistency of preferences via a representable uninorm.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , a pyramid PSO (PPSO) with novel competitive and cooperative strategies to update particles' information is proposed, which has superior performance in terms of accuracy, Wilcoxon signed-rank test and convergence speed, yet achieves comparable running time in most cases.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper describes the process for full pairwise analysis of the authors' high-throughput ADME assays routinely used for compound discovery efforts at Pfizer (microsomal clearance, passive membrane permeability, P-gp efflux, and lipophilicity).

54 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2018
TL;DR: This work considers ordinal elections, and introduces novel variants of voting rules that are tailored to the liquid democracy context, based on the framework of distance rationalization.
Abstract: In a liquid democracy, voters can either vote directly or delegate their vote to another voter of their choice. We consider ordinal elections, and study a model of liquid democracy in which voters specify partial orders and use several delegates to refine them. This flexibility, however, comes at a price, as individual rationality (in the form of transitive preferences) can no longer be guaranteed. We discuss ways to detect and overcome such complications. Based on the framework of distance rationalization, we introduce novel variants of voting rules that are tailored to the liquid democracy context.

54 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed a number of methods that have been widely used to facilitate the structuring and understanding of the perceived decision problem, such as the Pareto optimality and the simple additive ranking approach followed by the approaches belonging to the so-called multiattribute value theory.
Abstract: Multi-criteria decision making (MCDM) deals with decisions involving the choice of the best alternative among several potential candidates in a decision. Every decision requires the balancing of multiple factors, the criteria, which is done sometimes explicitly, sometimes without conscious consideration. Decision might be a simple choice between two or more well-defined alternatives; however, often, decision problems are rather complex problems covering information of complex and conflicting nature reflecting differing perspectives. It is under these conditions that the tools and methods presented in this chapter come into play. We reviewed a number of methods that have been widely used to facilitate the structuring and understanding of the perceived decision problem. We started with the simplest approaches, such as the Pareto optimality and the simple additive ranking approach followed by the approaches belonging to the so-called multiattribute value theory, that is, utility, desirability, and dominance functions. In these models, numerical scores are constructed to represent the degree to which an alternative may be preferred to another. These scores are developed initially for each criterion and are aggregated into a higher level of preference models. The outranking model category, which includes PROMETHEE, ELECTRE, and ORESTE (Organisation, Rangement Et Synthese de donnees relaTionElles) methods, is then presented. In these methods, alternatives are compared pairwise, initially in terms of each criterion and then the preference information is aggregated across all the criteria. These methods attempt to set up the strength of evidence in favor of one alternative over the others. A fairly detailed description of the methods ELECTRE I, II, and III is provided to illustrate its evolution from a simple method to a quite sophisticated method. The Hasse diagram technique is illustrated as an example of partial order ranking (POR) methods, which are vectorial approaches that recognize that different criteria are not always in agreement, but can be conflicting, which means that not all the alternatives can be directly compared with others. This approach not only ranks alternatives but also identifies contradictions in the criteria used for ranking, allowing the so-called incomparable condition where some residual order remains. The chapter also provides a short overview of the goal programming approach. The theoretical background of each of these models is presented together with the practical implementation of some of these methods provided as an illustrative example.

54 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20231,305
20222,607
2021581
2020554
2019520