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Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

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Page 1: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 &

4

Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 &

4April 4, 2011

presented by Tucker LentzApril 4, 2011

presented by Tucker Lentz

Page 2: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

AgendaAgenda11:00 Chapter 3:

Extensive Measurement

12:40 break

12:50 Chapter 4: Difference Measurement

11:00 Chapter 3: Extensive Measurement

12:40 break

12:50 Chapter 4: Difference Measurement

Page 3: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Ch 3: Extensive Measurement

Ch 3: Extensive Measurement

Page 4: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Closed Extensive Structure

closed, i.e., when any two objects can be concatenated

Connectivity: for all a, b A, a ∈ ≿b or b a (p14)≾

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No matter what the difference is between c and d, as long as a strictly exceeds b, there is some integer that when multiplied by the difference between a and b will swamp the difference between c and d.

there are no negative nor zero elements

Page 5: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Closed Extensive Structure

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Page 6: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Formal Proof of Theorem 1

8080

Page 7: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

<A, , ○> is a ≿ simply ordered group iff

<A, > is a simple order≿<A, ○> is a group

If a b, then a○c b○c and c○a c○b. ≿ ≿ ≿<A, , ○> is also ≿ Archimedean if (with the

identity element e) a e, then na b, for ≻ ≻some n.

Theorem 5 (Holder's Theorem) An Archimedean simply ordered group is isomorphic to a subgroup of <R, ≥, +>, and the isomorphism is unique up to scaling by a positive constant.

Page 8: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

LEMMA 1: There is no anomalous pair. (p 77)

LEMMA 2: Every element is either positive, null or negative. (p 78)

LEMMA 3: ⟨A, , ◦⟩ is weakly ≿commutative (p 78)

LEMMA 4: The relation ≈ on A x A is an equivalence relation (p 79)

Formal Proof of Theorem 1

Page 9: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Formal Proof of Theorem 1

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Page 10: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Formal Proof of Theorem 1

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Lemma 6 and Theorem 2.5 prove the existence ofa real-valued function ψ on D such that such that for all [a, b], [c, d] ∈ D

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Page 11: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Formal Proof of Theorem 1

Define ϕ on A as follows: for all a ∈ A, ϕ(a) = ψ([2a, a]). We verify that ϕ has the desired properties.

Page 12: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Informal Proof Sketch

Page 13: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Informal Proof SketchSelect any e in A; this will be the unit. For any other a in A, and for any positive integer n, the Archimedean axiom guarantees that there is an integer m for which me na. Let m≻ n be the least integer for which this is true, namely, mne na (m≻ ≿ n - l)e. Thus, mn copies of e, are approximately equal to n copies of a. As we select n larger and larger, the approximation presumably gets closer and closer and, assuming that the limit exists, it is plausible to define

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Page 14: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

When concatenation is not closed

B is the subset of A x A that contains the pairs that can be concatenated (82)

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Page 15: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive structure with no essential maximum

The new associativity: if a, b can be concatenated, and a ◦ b can be concatenated with c, then any concatenation of a , b and c is allowed (82)

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Page 16: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive structure with no essential maximum

Commutativity and monotonicity: If a and c can be concatenated, and a strictly exceeds b, then c and b can be concatenated, and the concatenation of a and c must exceed the concatenation of c and b. (83)

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Page 17: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive structure with no essential maximum

Solvability postulate: there is no smallest element A that can be concatenated. (83)

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Page 18: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive structure with no essential maximum

Positivity

8484

Page 19: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive structure with no essential maximum

Archimedean axiom: In the earlier structure we defined na and then had for any b in A, there is an n such that na b. However, because ≿of the restrictions on B, we may not arbitrarily concatenate elements in A. So axiom 6 defines a strictly bounded standard sequence, and assumes it is finite. (83-84)

8484

Page 20: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive structure with no essential maximum

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Page 21: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Some Empirical Interpretations

New concatenation operation: a * b is the hypotenuse of a right triangle formed by rods a and bThis results in a structure ⟨A, , *⟩ that satisfies ≿the axioms of definition 3, and the resulting ψ is proportional to ϕ2

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Page 22: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Some Empirical Interpretations

“To most people, the new interpretation seems much more artificial than the original one. In spite of this strong feeling, neither Ellis nor the authors know of any argument for favoring the first interpretation except familiarity, convention, and, perhaps, convenience...”

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Page 23: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Some Empirical Interpretations

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Page 24: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Some Empirical Interpretations

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Page 25: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Some Empirical Interpretations

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⟨A, , ◦⟩≿⟨A, ’, ‖⟩≿

Page 26: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Velocity

• In a Newtonian universe, a closed extensive structure ⟨A, , ◦⟩ could ≿represent velocity

• For a relativistic universe we need to introduce extensive structures with essential maxima

Page 27: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Essential Maxima in Extensive Structures

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Page 28: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Essential Maxima in Extensive Structures

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Page 29: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Essential Maxima in Extensive Structures

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Page 30: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Essential Maxima in Extensive Structures

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• Theorem 7 gives the representation required for relativistic velocities

Page 31: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Non-Additive Representations

• right-angled concatenation and relativistic velocity are two examples of non-additive representations

• a third: Consider a positive extensive structure with a scale ϕ additive over ◦; then ψ = exp ϕ is an alternative scale, which is multiplicative over ◦.

101000

Page 32: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Non-Additive Representations

101000

Page 33: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Conventionality of Representations

101022

“...despite its great appeal and universal acceptance, the additive representation is just one of the infinitely many, equally adequate representations that are generated by the family of strictly monotonic increasing functions from the reals onto the positive reals...”

Page 34: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Extensive Measurement in the Social Sciences

• In many cases, there is no concatenation operation appropriate to the entities of interest in social science

• However, an empirical concatenation operation is not necessary for fundamental measurement

• There are cases where it works, e.g., subjective probability (ch 5) and risk (3.14.1)

Page 35: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Risk

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Page 36: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Risk

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Page 37: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Risk

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Page 38: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Risk

121277

Page 39: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

Limitations of Extensive Measurement

While I am certain we won’t have time to discuss it, I highly recommend reading the 2 page discussion of this topic (pages 130-132).

Page 40: Foundations of Measurement Ch 3 & 4 April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz April 4, 2011 presented by Tucker Lentz

EndEnd