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Question about the influence of prior choice on Bayes factor #535

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If you have very wide priors, it seems unlikely you would want to compute a Bayes factor against the null.

BF is essentially a bet - you are betting the data will on average fit your prior compared to the null. But a very wide prior means that are betting on a wide verity of values, and so you will certainly be more wrong than right (compared to the null).


Example:
I (the null) say that the value is 0.
You say: No, it is not 0 - it is somewhere between -100 and +100.

We collect data and find that in the range of -100 and +100, the data is relatively (to my 0) less compatible with most of that range. So on average, your "bet" was worst than mine.

With Bayes factors: More specific and nuan…

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@zhengchencai
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@bwiernik
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Answer selected by zhengchencai
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Converted from issue

This discussion was converted from issue #534 on June 02, 2022 04:42.