PhD student at ENS Paris in evolutionary biology. I co-founded EffiSciences, an organisation dedicated to promoting high-impact research in France (https://www.effisciences.org). I also co-started a local EA group at ENS.
Jérémy Andréoletti
Thanks for raising this question! Following other comment, I find the use of somewhat unsatisfactory.
Perhaps some of the confusion could be reduced by i) taking into account the number of interventions and ii) distinguishing the following two situations:1. Epistemic uncertainty: the magic intervention will always save 1 life, or always save 100 lives, or always save 199 lives, we just don’t know. In this case, one can repeat the intervention as many times as one wants, the expected cost-effectiveness will remain ~$3,400/life.
2. True randomness: sometimes the magic intervention will save 1 life, sometimes 100 lives, sometimes 199 lives. What happens then if you repeat it n times? If , your expectation is still ~$3400/life (tail risk of a single life saved). But the more interventions you do, the more you converge to a combined cost-effectiveness $100/life (see figure below), because failed interventions will probably be compensated by very successful ones.
(R code to reproduce the plot :
X <- sample(1:20,1000000, replace=T) ; Y <- sapply(X,function(n)mean(10000*n/sum(sample(c(1,100,199), n, replace = T)))) ; plot(X, Y, log="y", pch=19, col=alpha("forestgreen", 0.3), xlab="Number of interventions", ylab="Cost-effectiveness ($/life, log scale)", main="Expected cost to save a live decreases with more interventions") ; lines(sort(unique(X)), sapply(sort(unique(X)), function(x)mean(Y[X==x])), lwd=3, col=alpha("darkgreen",0.5))
)I’m not sure how to translate this into practice, especially since you can consider EA interventions as a portfolio even if you don’t repeat the intervention 10 times yourself. But do you find this framing useful?
- Probability distributions of Cost-Effectiveness can be misleading by 18 Jul 2022 17:42 UTC; 70 points) (
- 19 Jul 2022 11:42 UTC; 1 point) 's comment on Probability distributions of Cost-Effectiveness can be misleading by (
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