Evaluating Probabilistic Classifiers: The Triptych
This addresses the need for comprehensive evaluation methods for probabilistic classifiers in various scientific and societal applications, though it is incremental as it builds on existing concepts like the CORP approach.
The paper tackles the problem of evaluating probabilistic classifiers by proposing a triptych of diagnostic graphics—reliability diagram, ROC curve, and Murphy diagram—to assess calibration, discrimination, and overall predictive performance, with empirical examples from astrophysics, economics, and social science.
Probability forecasts for binary outcomes, often referred to as probabilistic classifiers or confidence scores, are ubiquitous in science and society, and methods for evaluating and comparing them are in great demand. We propose and study a triptych of diagnostic graphics that focus on distinct and complementary aspects of forecast performance: The reliability diagram addresses calibration, the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve diagnoses discrimination ability, and the Murphy diagram visualizes overall predictive performance and value. A Murphy curve shows a forecast's mean elementary scores, including the widely used misclassification rate, and the area under a Murphy curve equals the mean Brier score. For a calibrated forecast, the reliability curve lies on the diagonal, and for competing calibrated forecasts, the ROC and Murphy curves share the same number of crossing points. We invoke the recently developed CORP (Consistent, Optimally binned, Reproducible, and Pool-Adjacent-Violators (PAV) algorithm based) approach to craft reliability diagrams and decompose a mean score into miscalibration (MCB), discrimination (DSC), and uncertainty (UNC) components. Plots of the DSC measure of discrimination ability versus the calibration metric MCB visualize classifier performance across multiple competitors. The proposed tools are illustrated in empirical examples from astrophysics, economics, and social science.