Monday, April 07, 2008

Technology challenges another ancient and noble profession...

It's not just farmers who are seeing hard-won skills tromped into obsolescence. Tragically, the sports bookie is also under cyber-attack.
Sports professionals and fans get pretty emotional about their picks for the NCAA basketball tournament each year, and that emotion often clouds their judgment.

But three engineering professors at the Georgia Institute of Technology have created a computer ranking system, called LRMC, that consistently predicts NCAA basketball rankings more accurately than the AP poll of sportswriters and the ESPN/USA Today poll of coaches, formulas (the Ratings Percentage Index), other computer models (the Massey ratings and the Sagarin ratings), and even the tournament seeds themselves.

After correctly picking all four of this year’s finalists, the LRMC method has now identified 30 of the last 36 Final Four participants (83 percent accuracy over the past nine years of NCAA tournaments) as one of the top two teams in their region. Over the same nine-year stretch, the seedings and polls have correctly identified only 23, and the RPI indentified 21. [More]
Pretty soon the blackjack cards will come spitting out of a vending machine, I'll bet.

[via 3 Quarks]

No comments: