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词条 Chessmetrics
释义

  1. Implementation

     Formulas 

  2. Perceived advantages

  3. Perceived disadvantages

  4. Popularity

  5. See also

  6. Notes

  7. External links

{{notability|date=December 2015}}

Chessmetrics is a system for rating chess players devised by Jeff Sonas. It is intended as an improvement over the Elo rating system.

Implementation

Chessmetrics is a weighted average of past performance.[1] The score considers a player's win percentage against other players weighted by the ratings of the other players and the time elapsed since the match. A 10% increase in performance is equivalent to an increase of 85 rating points.

The weighting of previous matches digresses linearly from 100% for just-finished matches to zero for matches conducted more than two years ago.

Formulas

Performance rating adjustment after tournament:

Performance Rating = Average Opponents' Rating + [(PctScore - 0.50) * 850]

Weighting of past tournaments (age in months):

100% * (24 - age)

Perceived advantages

In 2006 economists Charles C. Moul and John V. C. Nye used Chessmetrics to determine the "expected" results of games, and wrote:

Ratings in chess that make use of rigorous statistics to produce good estimates of relative player strength are now relatively common, but comparing ratings across different time periods is often complicated by idiosyncratic changes (cf. Elo, 1968 for the pioneering discussion). Sonas uses the same rating formula throughout our sample and updates this rating monthly instead of annually, as is more common. Moreover, retrospective grading allows him to establish rankings that are unbiased estimates of the "true" relative strengths of players.[2]

Jeff Sonas, Chessmetrics' author, claims that Chessmetrics has advantages over Elo ratings:[3]

  • Elo ratings have a built-in bias against top players, in other words a top player's rating will suffer if he / she achieves against a lower-rated player the percentage result that the players' Elo ratings predict.
  • Chessmetrics is more responsive to change than Elo ratings, for example Chessmetrics will track more promptly and accurately improvements in the playing strength of a rising star. Sonas regards this as an important part of Chessmetrics's superior ability to predict results.
  • Chessmetrics takes account of the empirically-measured difference in results when playing as White or Black, which the Elo system ignores.

Perceived disadvantages

Chessmetrics occasionally gives strange-looking results, particularly for players with long periods of inactivity. For instance, World Chess Champion Emanuel Lasker was inactive for much of 1912–1914, and as a consequence dropped from #1 to #12 in the world in the Chessmetrics rankings,[4] just before his famous victory ahead of all the world's other leading players at the 1914 Saint Petersburg chess tournament. Also, Chessmetrics included a 1903 match with Chigorin where Lasker was handicapped by having to play the Rice Gambit in every game; normally fixed-openings games are not counted for ratings. Neither of the contestants nor the general public thought it a real test of strength.

Chessmetrics can only be used to compare the level of a player against their peers; it is not appropriate to use Chessmetrics to compare players of different era. For example, GM John Nunn has highlighted the absurdity of attempts to compare the objective playing strengths of players from different eras. He used the example of Hugo Suechting, world ranked 27 and rated 2559 by Chessmetrics in 1911, after the Elite tournament in Karlsbad. An analysis of Suechting's games from that period suggested to Nunn that his level of play was at best 2100 by today's standards.[5]

Chessmetrics site's last update was March 26, 2005.

Popularity

The original article on Chessmetrics was published in Chessbase in October 2002.[3] Since then, Chessmetrics has become reasonably well known, due to numerous articles in Chessbase and The Week in Chess.[6]

Chess author John L. Watson has referred to Chessmetrics numbers,[7] and Chessmetrics has been cited in at least two academic papers.[2][8]

See also

  • Chess rating systems

Notes

1. ^Chessmetrics formulas page {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110809102543/http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/Formulas.asp |date=2011-08-09 }}
2. ^{{ cite web | ssrn= 905612 | title=Did the Soviets Collude? A Statistical Analysis of Championship Chess 1940–64 | author=Charles C. Moul and John V. C. Nye |date=May 2006 | publisher=The Social Science Research Network | accessdate=2008-07-08 }} Full article freely available via links on the cited web page.
3. ^{{ cite web | url=http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=562 | title=The Sonas Rating Formula – Better than Elo? | author=Jeff Sonas | date=22 October 2002 | accessdate=2008-07-08 }}
4. ^Chessmetrics Player Profile: Emanuel Lasker {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425121444/http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/PlayerProfile.asp?Params=190030SS3SS3S073076191404141000000000000010100 |date=April 25, 2012 }}, Chessmetrics web site
5. ^Nunn's criticism {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110813123115/http://chess.co.uk/twic/jwatsonbkrev82.html |date=August 13, 2011 }}
6. ^For instance, Chessmetrics articles on Comparison of top chess players throughout history at Chessbase: Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4
7. ^Book Reviews, #82, by John L. Watson, published at The Week in Chess
8. ^Computer Analysis of World Chess Champions, M.Guid and I.Bratko, ICGA Journal (Vol 29, No. 2, June 2006, pages 65–73).

External links

  • Chessmetrics site
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