Title: THE ANALYTIC HIERARCHY PROCESS CAR PURCHASE EXAMPLE
1THE ANALYTIC HIERARCHY PROCESSCAR PURCHASE
EXAMPLE
2CAR PURCHASE EXAMPLE
- We now consider a motivating example.
- After completing this example, you will have an
understanding of the basics of AHP and its
application through Expert Choice
(www.expertchoice.com). - We want to apply the AHP to help a couple decide
which car they should purchase.
3CAR PURCHASE EXAMPLE
- The couple is considering three criteria cost,
safety, and appearance. - They have narrowed their alternatives to three
specific cars Honda, Mazda, and Volvo. - We demonstrate how to build the AHP hierarchy in
Expert Choice.
4EXPERT CHOICE FILE SETUP
- After launching Expert Choice, select the File,
New option, and after selecting a destination
folder, enter a file name such as CARS. (Expert
Choice add the AHP file extension.) - Next, enter a description for your goal, such as,
Select the best car.
5EXPERT CHOICE FILE SETUP
- To enter the criteria, for example, cost, safety,
and appearance, use the Edit, and Insert Child of
Current Node commands. - Use the Esc key or hit an extra enter when
finished entering the criteria. - To add the alternative cars select the Edit,
Alternative, and Insert commands.
6EXPERT CHOICE FILE SETUP
- You can also use the Add Alternative button in
the upper right hand corner of the model window. - Repeat for all alternatives.
- Additional details can be found in the Expert
Choice tutorial provided with the software.
7ANALYZING THE HIERARCHY
- 1. Determine the weights of the alternatives for
each criterion. - 2. Determine the priorities or weights of the
criteria in achieving the goal. - 3. Determine the overall weight of each
alternative in achieving the goal. This is
accomplished by combining the results of the
first two stages and is called synthesis.
8ANALYZING THE HIERARCHY
- To complete the first stage, the couple can base
their judgments on the following (hypothetical)
performance information. - All alternative pairwise comparisons should be
based on data.
9HYPOTHETICAL DATA FOR CAR PURCHASE EXAMPLE
Car Cost Safety Appearance
Honda 22,000 28 Sporty Mazda
28,500 39 Slick Volvo 33,000 52 Dull
Safety Rating from a consumer testing service -
the higher the number, the safer the car.
10DETERMINING PRIORITIES
- The couple begins by making pairwise comparison
judgments between each pair of cars for the cost
criterion. - In our example, three judgments are needed Honda
to Mazda, Mazda to Volvo, and Honda to Volvo. - The scale on the next page is the standard one.
11STANDARD 1 - 9 MEASUREMENT SCALE
- Intensity of Importance Definition
Explanation - 1 Equal importance Two activities contribute
equally - 3 Moderate importance Experience and judgment
slightly favor one - activity over another
- 5 Strong importance Experience and judgment
strongly favor one - activity over another
- 7 Very strong An activity is favored very
strongly over - another
- 9 Extreme importance The evidence favoring one
activity over - another is of the highest possible order
- of affirmation
- 2, 4, 6, 8 For compromise Sometimes one needs
to interpolate a - values compromise between the above judgment
- numerically because there is no good
- word to describe it
- 1.1 - 1.9 For tied activities When elements
are close and nearly - indistinguishable moderate is 1.3 and
- extreme is 1.9
- Reciprocals of above If activity A has For
example, if the pairwise comparison of
12COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- The pairwise comparisons are represented in the
form of pairwise comparison matrices. - The computation of the weights are also shown.
- Consider the pairwise comparison matrix to
compare the cars for the cost criterion. - Remember that the costs of the three cars are
22000, 28500, and 33000, respectively.
13COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- If we compare the Honda to the Honda, obviously
they are equal. - Therefore, a 1 (equal preferred) is placed in the
first row, first column entry of the matrix.
14COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1
- 28.5K Mazda
- 33K Volvo
-
15COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- The other entries along the main diagonal of the
matrix are also 1. - This simply means that everything is equally
preferred to itself.
16COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1
- 28.5K Mazda 1
- 33K Volvo 1
17COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- Suppose we believe the Honda (22000) is equally
to moderately preferred to the Mazda (28500).
Place a 2 in the row 1, column 2 entry. - Some might argue that the Honda should be 1.295
times better than the Mazda (28,500/22,000).
18COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- Do you agree?
- It depends!
- For some, 28,500 is significantly greater than
22,000, implying a judgments greater than 1.295.
- Others with a lot of money may perceive virtually
no difference between the two costs, implying a
judgment somewhere between 1 and 1.295.
19COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2
- 28.5K Mazda 1
- 33K Volvo 1
20COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- If the Honda is 2 times better than the Mazda,
this implies that the Mazda (28500) is one half
as good as the Honda (22000). - The reciprocal judgment, (1/2), should be placed
in the row 2, column 1 entry of the matrix.
21COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
- 33K Volvo 1
22COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- Suppose that we judge the Mazda (28500) to be
equally to moderately preferred to the Volvo
(33000). - The following judgments would be entered in the
matrix.
23COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/2 1
24COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- Assuming perfect consistency of judgments, we
would expect that the Honda (22000) is 4 times
(that is, moderately to strongly) preferred to
the Volvo (33000). - We will relax this assumption later.
25COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
26COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- The matrix is now complete and the weights for
each car (for the cost criterion) can be
computed. - The exact computational procedure is implemented
in Expert Choice. - For details see Expert Choice homepage and
download AHPDEMO.EXE.
27COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A simple three step procedure can be used to
approximate the weights for each alternative. - Essentially, this procedure normalizes the ratios
of the judgments between any pair of alternatives.
28COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS
-
-
29COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 7/2 7
30COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 7/2 7
31COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 7/2 7
-
- B. ADJUSTED COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- Honda 4/7 4/7 4/7
- Mazda 2/7 2/7 2/7
- Volvo 1/7 1/7 1/7
-
32COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- Notice that no variation is seen across the rows
because the judgments are perfectly consistent. - For the third column, judgments totaling 7 were
awarded. The Honda received 4 of 7 (57.1), the
Mazda 2 of 7 (28.6), and the Volvo 1 of 7
(14.3) of the weight. - Similar comparisons can be made for the other two
columns.
33COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 7/2 7
-
- B. ADJUSTED COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- Honda 4/7 4/7 4/7
- Mazda 2/7 2/7 2/7
- Volvo 1/7 1/7 1/7
34COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
2 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/2 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 7/2 7
-
- B. ADJUSTED COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
WEIGHTS - Honda Mazda Volvo
(ROW AVG.) - Honda 4/7 4/7 4/7
0.571 - Mazda 2/7 2/7 2/7
0.286 - Volvo 1/7 1/7 1/7
0.143 -
---------
35EXPERT CHOICE Entering Judgments
- Expert Choice offers a variety of modes for
entering the judgments. - Highlight the cost node and select the Pairwise
Numerical comparison button (31). - This button appears on the top left-hand side of
the toolbar to the right of the model view
button.
36EXPERT CHOICE Entering Judgments
- Sliding the bar between Honda and Mazda to the
left so that it rests on the 2 means that the
Honda is two times better than the Mazda when
considering cost. - If the Mazda were 2 times better than the Honda,
the bar would be slid to the 2 on the right. - The other comparisons are entered in a similar
fashion.
37EXPERT CHOICE Entering Judgments
- For our problem, Expert Choice only displays
three judgments. - 1s along the main diagonal and reciprocal
judgments do not appear.
38EXPERT CHOICE Entering Judgments
- There are different modes for entering judgments.
- The Pairwise Verbal Comparisons (ABC) and the
Pairwise Graphical Comparisons (the button that
looks like a bar graph) are available. - The only difference between these modes is how
the pairwise comparison questions are displayed.
39EXPERT CHOICE Entering Judgments
- A 1-9 scale is used for numerical comparisons.
- The verbal comparisons are equal, moderate,
strong, very strong, and extreme. - The graphical mode makes comparisons based on the
length of two bars. - The user selects the desired mode.
40EXPERT CHOICE Entering Judgments
- After entering all pairwise comparisons, record
judgments by clicking Yes. - The model view will be displayed with alternative
weights for the cost criterion now appearing.
41INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- Since our pairwise comparisons were perfectly
consistent, Expert Choice reports Incon 0.00. - If this ratio is greater than 0.1 some revision
of judgments is required. - Select Inconsistency (within any Pairwise
Comparison mode) to identify the most
inconsistent judgments.
42INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- Inconsistency of judgments may result from
- problems of estimation
- errors between the comparisons
- or, the comparisons may be naturally
inconsistent.
43INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- One example of natural inconsistency is in a
sporting contest. - If team A is twice as likely to beat team B, and
if team B is three times as likely to beat team
C, this does not necessarily imply that team A is
six times as likely to beat team C. - This inconsistency may result because of the way
that the teams match-up overall.
44INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- The point is not to stop inconsistency from
occurring. - Make sure that the level of inconsistency remains
within some reasonable limit.
45INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- How does a judgment change affect the car
weights? - Suppose the Mazda to Volvo changes from 2 to 3.
- This obviously changes the comparison for Volvo
to Mazda from (1/2) to (1/3). - The judgments are now somewhat inconsistent.
46COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
3 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/3 1
47COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. - A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
3 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/3 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 10/3 8
48COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. -
- A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
3 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/3 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 10/3 8
-
- B. ADJUSTED COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- Honda 4/7 6/10 4/8
- Mazda 2/7 3/10 3/8
- Volvo 1/7 1/10 1/8
-
49COST PAIRWISE COMPARISONS
- 1. SUM THE ELEMENTS IN EACH COLUMN OF THE
ORIGINAL MATRIX. - 2. DIVIDE EACH ELEMENT IN THE ORIGINAL MATRIX BY
ITS COLUMN SUM. - THIS RESULTS IN THE ADJUSTED MATRIX.
- 3. COMPUTE THE ROW AVERAGES - THESE ARE THE
WEIGHTS. - A. ORIGINAL COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 22K Honda 1 2 4
- 28.5K Mazda 1/2 1
3 - 33K Volvo 1/4 1/3 1
- ------- ------- -------
- COLUMN TOTALS 7/4 10/3 8
-
- B. ADJUSTED COST PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX
WEIGHTS - Honda Mazda Volvo
(ROW AVG.) - Honda 4/7 6/10 4/8
0.557 - Mazda 2/7 3/10 3/8
0.320 - Volvo 1/7 1/10 1/8
0.123 -
--------
50INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- The new weights are 0.557, 0.320, and 0.123.
The inconsistency resulted in some change in the
original weights of 0.571, 0.286, and 0.143. - As expected, the weight for the Mazda increased
while the weight for the Volvo decreased. - The weights now vary across each row.
Essentially, inconsistency measures the degree of
variation across the rows.
51EXPERT CHOICE Revising Judgments
- To make this change in Expert Choice, highlight
cost node and select any Pairwise Comparison
mode. - Within the numerical mode, slide the comparison
bar to the left from 2 to 3, select the Model
View, and record the judgments to see the new
weights. -
- The weights of 0.558, 0.320, and 0.122 are
slightly different from the three-step procedure
weights. - This is not due to rounding -- Expert Choice
gives the exact results.
52INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- The inconsistency ratio is now 0.02.
- The weights can also be used to measure the
effectiveness of the alternatives. - For example, based on all comparisons, the Honda
is 1.74 (0.558/0.320) times better than the Mazda.
53INCONSISTENCY OF JUDGMENTS
- We knew that a 22,000 car is better than a
28,500 car, but now we know how much better. - Why is this ratio 1.74 and not the pairwise
comparison of 2? - Inconsistency in the judgments!
54REMAINING COMPUTATIONS
- Next, the cars must be pairwise compared for the
safety criterion and then for the appearance
criterion. - These judgments are shown on the next page.
- The safety comparisons are all inverted, that is,
for each comparison, the top bar was moved to the
left. - This means that the Mazda is 2 times more
preferred than the Honda, with respect to safety.
55SAFETY APPEARANCE JUDGMENTS
- Safety Pairwise Comparison Matrix
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- 28 Honda 1 1/2 1/5
- 39 Mazda 2 1 1/4
- 52 Volvo 5 4 1
- Appearance Pairwise Comparison Matrix
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- SportyHonda 1 5 9
- Slick Mazda 1/5 1 2
- Dull Volvo 1/9 1/2 1
56REMAINING COMPUTATIONS
- Next, the criteria must be pairwise compared.
- These judgments are shown on the next page.
- There are no data to support these judgments
since they are purely a reflection of your
preferences.
57CRITERIA JUDGMENTS
- Original Criteria Pairwise Comparison Matrix
- Cost Safety Appearance
- Cost 1 1/2 3
- Safety 2 1 5
- Appearance 1/3 1/5 1
58REMAINING COMPUTATIONS
- The last stage computes the final weights for
each car. - Multiply the criteria weight by the car weight
for each criterion and then sum over all
criteria. - This is nothing more than a weighted average.
- The computational results are shown next.
59FINAL CAR WEIGHTS
- CRITERIA WEIGHTS
- COST SAFETY
APPEARANCE - 0.309 0.582 0.109
- CARS
FINAL WEIGHTS - Honda 0.558 0.117 0.761
- Mazda 0.320 0.200 0.158
- Volvo 0.122 0.683 0.082
60FINAL CAR WEIGHTS
- CRITERIA WEIGHTS
- COST SAFETY
APPEARANCE - 0.309 0.582 0.109
- CARS
FINAL WEIGHTS - Honda 0.558 0.117 0.761
0.324 - Mazda 0.320 0.200 0.158
- Volvo 0.122 0.683 0.082
- Honda (0.558)(0.309) (0.117)(0.582)
(0.761)(0.109) 0.324 - 0.173 0.068 0.083
61FINAL CAR WEIGHTS
- CRITERIA WEIGHTS
- COST SAFETY
APPEARANCE - 0.309 0.582 0.109
- CARS
FINAL WEIGHTS - Honda 0.558 0.117 0.761
0.324 - Mazda 0.320 0.200 0.158
0.232 - Volvo 0.122 0.683 0.082
- Honda (0.558)(0.309) (0.117)(0.582)
(0.761)(0.109) 0.324 - 0.173 0.068 0.083
- Mazda (0.320)(0.309) (0.200)(0.582)
(0.158)(0.109) 0.232 - 0.099 0.116 0.017
62FINAL CAR WEIGHTS
- CRITERIA WEIGHTS
- COST SAFETY
APPEARANCE - 0.309 0.582 0.109
- CARS
FINAL WEIGHTS - Honda 0.558 0.117 0.761
0.324 - Mazda 0.320 0.200 0.158
0.232 - Volvo 0.122 0.683 0.082
0.444 - Honda (0.558)(0.309) (0.117)(0.582)
(0.761)(0.109) 0.324 - 0.173 0.068 0.083
- Mazda (0.320)(0.309) (0.200)(0.582)
(0.158)(0.109) 0.232 - 0.099 0.116 0.017
- Volvo (0.122)(0.309) (0.683)(0.582)
(0.082)(0.109) 0.444 - 0.038 0.397 0.009
63LOCAL VS GLOBAL WEIGHTS
- For cost, the local weights for the cars are
0.558, 0.320, and 0.122 and sum to 1.000. - The global weights are computed by multiplying
the cost criterion weight by the local car
weights. - The global weights are 0.173, 0.099, and 0.038
and sum to the cost criterion weight of 0.309.
64EXPERT CHOICE Synthesis
- The final weights are shown in Expert Choice
after all comparisons are entered and when the
Model View is displayed and the goal is
highlighted. - Choose Distributive Mode.
- The difference between the Distributive and Ideal
modes will be discussed later.
65INTERPRETING THE RESULTS
- The final weights provide a measure of the
relative performance of each alternative. - It is important to properly interpret the meaning
of these numbers. - The Volvo is ranked first, the Honda second, and
Mazda third. - The Volvo is preferred 1.37 (0.444/0.324) times
more than the Honda.
66INTERPRETING THE RESULTS
- Should we buy the Volvo?
- The output is a decision-making aid and cannot
replace the decision-maker. - The results can be used to support discussion and
possibly the judgments will be revised. - This iterative process is quite normal.
- AHP can help to facilitate communication and
generate consensus between different groups.
67SYNTHESIS MODES
- The process used to compute the final weights is
called distributive synthesis. - This method works well when there is a fixed
amount of resources that must be distributed to a
fixed set of alternatives.
68SYNTHESIS MODES
- In some cases after completing an AHP analysis,
an additional alternative may need to be
considered. - It is possible that a rank reversal could occur.
- Our rankings are Volvo, Honda, and Mazda.
- If another Volvo is added that is similar to the
original Volvo, it is possible that the Honda
will be ranked higher than the original Volvo.
69SYNTHESIS MODES
- In some cases this is acceptable, in others it is
not. - Distributive synthesis should not be used if
preservation of rank is important. - Ideal Synthesis should be used to prevent rank
reversal.
70IDEAL MODE
- The ideal mode gives the full weight of the
criterion to the alternative that ranks highest
under that criterion. - The other alternatives are given a portion of the
criterion weight based on their local weight.
71IDEAL MODE
- The local weights for the three cars with respect
to cost are 0.558, 0.320, and 0.122,
respectively. The cost criterion weight is
0.309. - Since the Honda has the highest cost weight it is
initially assigned the full cost weight of 0.309.
- Mazda would be (0.320 / 0.558)(0.309) 0.177.
- Volvo would be (0.122 / 0.558)(0.309) 0.068.
72IDEAL MODE
- Using the same approach, the weights for the
three cars with respect to safety are 0.100,
0.170, and 0.582, respectively. - The weights for the three cars with respect to
appearance are 0.109, 0.023, and 0.012,
respectively.
73IDEAL MODE
- For each car, add the three criteria weights
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- Cost 0.309 0.177 0.068
- Safety 0.100 0.170 0.582
- Appearance 0.109 0.023 0.012
- Total 0.518 0.370 0.662
74IDEAL MODE
- For each car, add the three criteria weights
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- Cost 0.309 0.177 0.068
- Safety 0.100 0.170 0.582
- Appearance 0.109 0.023 0.012
- Total 0.518 0.370 0.662
Since the sum of the three weights is 1.550, we
divide each weight by 1.550 to normalize the
results.
75IDEAL MODE
- For each car, add the three criteria weights
- Honda Mazda Volvo
- Cost 0.309 0.177 0.068
- Safety 0.100 0.170 0.582
- Appearance 0.109 0.023 0.012
- Total 0.518 0.370 0.662
- Total/1.550 0.335 0.239 0.427
- These are the ideal weights reported in
- Expert Choice.
Since the sum of the three weights is 1.550, we
divide each weight by 1.550 to normalize the
results.
76SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
- Sensitivity analysis is an important aspect of
any decision-making process. - Sensitivity analysis determines whether small
changes in judgments affects the final weights
and rankings of the alternatives. - If so, the decision-maker may want to review the
sensitive judgments.
77EXPERT CHOICE Sensitivity Analysis
- In Expert Choice sensitivity analysis from the
GOAL shows how the weights and the rankings of
the alternatives change if some or all of the
criteria weights change. - There are five graphical sensitivity analysis
modes available Performance, Dynamic, Gradient,
Two-Dimensional, and Difference. - The first three show how a change in a criterion
weight affects the final weights of the
alternatives.
78EXPERT CHOICE Sensitivity Analysis
- The last two show how the alternatives perform
with respect to any two criteria. - Performance places all sensitivity information
on a single chart with horizontal line graphs for
the alternatives linked to vertical bars for the
criteria. - Dynamic two sets of dynamically linked
horizontal bar graphs one for criteria and one
for alternatives.
79EXPERT CHOICE Sensitivity Analysis
- Gradient a line graph that shows how the weights
of the alternatives vary according to the weight
assigned to a specific criterion. (Use the
X-Axis to change the selected criterion.) - Two-Dimensional shows how well the alternatives
perform with respect to any two criteria. - Difference a graph that shows the differences
between any two alternatives for any criterion.
80EXPERT CHOICE Sensitivity Analysis
- An important use of sensitivity analysis is to
determine how much a given criterion weight must
change before there is a change in the rankings
of the two highest alternatives. - This type of breakeven analysis can be easily
done in Expert Choice.
81EXPERT CHOICE Sensitivity Analysis
- Choose Dynamic from the Sensitivity-Graphs
option. - Drag the cost criterion bar 30.9 to
approximately 45.9, and see that the Volvo and
Honda have the same highest final weight. - The final rankings are relatively insensitive to
a change in the cost weight since it had to be
increased by almost 50 to get a change in the
final rankings. - The sensitivity results are different for the
ideal mode.