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3 - Rank from Comparisons and from Ratings in the Analytic Hierarchy/Network Processes

from PART I - Theoretical and Methodological Aspects of the AHP/ANP Methods

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2018

Thomas L. Saaty
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
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Summary

Key words: Analytic Hierarchy/Network Processes (AHP/ANP), rank, pairwise comparisons, ratings

Abstract

Rank preservation and reversal are important subjects in multicriteria decision-making particularly if a theory uses only one of two ways of creating priorities: rating alternatives one at a time with respect to an ideal or standard, or comparing them in pairs. It is known that our minds can do both. When rating alternatives, they must be assumed to be independent and rank should be preserved. When comparing alternatives, they must be assumed to be dependent and rank may not always be preserved. However, even in making comparisons rank can be preserved if one uses idealization instead of normalization with the original set of alternatives and preserves that ideal from then on unless that ideal itself is deleted for some reason. So often it is a matter of judgment as to whether it is desirable to force rank preservation or allow rank to adjust as necessary. Examples are given to illustrate the foregoing ideas.

INTRODUCTION

The Harvard psychologist Arthur Blumenthal (1977) tells us in his book The Process of Cognition that there are two types of judgment:

Comparative judgment which is the identification of some relation between two stimuli both present to the observer, and absolute judgment which involves the relation between a single stimulus and some information held in short term memory about some former comparison stimuli or about some previously experienced measurement scale using which the observer rates the single stimulus.

In the AHP we call the first relative measurement and the second absolute measurement. In relative measurement we compare each alternative with many other alternatives and in absolute measurement we compare each alternative with one ideal alternative we know of or can imagine, a process we call rating the alternative. The first is descriptive and the second is normative. Comparisons must precede ratings because ideals can only be created through experience. Since memory needs experience to develop standards, making comparisons is fundamental and intrinsic in us. They are not an intellectual invention nor are they something we can ignore.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Analytic Hierarchy and Network Processes
Application in Solving Multicriteria Decision Problems
, pp. 63 - 76
Publisher: Jagiellonian University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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