Introduction to Rare-Event Predictive Modeling for Inferential Statisticians -- A Hands-On Application in the Prediction of Breakthrough Patents

30 Mar 2020  ·  Daniel Hain, Roman Jurowetzki ·

Recent years have seen a substantial development of quantitative methods, mostly led by the computer science community with the goal of developing better machine learning applications, mainly focused on predictive modeling. However, economic, management, and technology forecasting research has so far been hesitant to apply predictive modeling techniques and workflows. In this paper, we introduce a machine learning (ML) approach to quantitative analysis geared towards optimizing the predictive performance, contrasting it with standard practices inferential statistics, which focus on producing good parameter estimates. We discuss the potential synergies between the two fields against the backdrop of this, at first glance, target-incompatibility. We discuss fundamental concepts in predictive modeling, such as out-of-sample model validation, variable and model selection, generalization, and hyperparameter tuning procedures. We are providing a hands-on predictive modeling introduction for a quantitative social science audience while aiming at demystifying computer science jargon. We use the illustrative example of patent quality estimation - which should be a familiar topic of interest in the Scientometrics community - guiding the reader through various model classes and procedures for data pre-processing, modeling, and validation. We start off with more familiar easy to interpret model classes (Logit and Elastic Nets), continues with less familiar non-parametric approaches (Classification Trees, Random Forest, Gradient Boosted Trees), and finally presents artificial neural network architectures, first a simple feed-forward and then a deep autoencoder geared towards rare-event prediction.

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