An approach to improve the predictive power of choice-based conjoint analysis
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
International Journal of Research in Marketing
Abstract
Conjoint analysis continues to be popular with over 18,000 applications each year. Choice-based conjoint (CBC) analysis is currently the most often used method of conjoint analysis accounting for eight-tenths of all conjoint studies. The CBC employs a multinomial logit model with heterogeneous parameters across the population. The most commonly used models of heterogeneity are the Latent Class Model, the single multivariate normal distribution, or a mixture of multivariate normal distributions. A more recent approach to capture heterogeneity is the Dirichlet Process Mixture (DPM) model and its predecessor Dirichlet Process Prior (DPP) model. The alternative models are empirically tested over eleven CBC data sets with varying characteristics. The DPM model provides the best predictive validity (percent of choices correctly predicted) for each of the eleven datasets studied, and provides a significant improvement over extant models of heterogeneity.
Publication Date
7-9-2016
Publisher
Elsevier
Volume
Vol.34
Issue
Iss.2
Recommended Citation
Voleti, Sudhir; Srinivasan, V; and Ghosh, Pulak, "An approach to improve the predictive power of choice-based conjoint analysis" (2016). Faculty Publications. 464.
https://research.iimb.ac.in/fac_pubs/464