Simple A simple example best illustrates the concept: Consider the decision situation with one decision, for example deciding on a 'Vacation Activity'; and one uncertainty, for example what will the 'Weather Condition' be? But we will only know the 'Weather Condition' after we have decided and begun the 'Vacation Activity'. :* The Value of perfect information on
Weather Condition captures the value of being able to know
Weather Condition even before making the
Vacation Activity decision. It is quantified as the highest price the decision-maker is willing to pay for being able to know
Weather Condition before making the
Vacation Activity decision. :*The Value of imperfect information on
Weather Condition, however, captures the value of being able to know the outcome of another related uncertainty, e.g.,
Weather Forecast, instead of
Weather Condition itself before making
Vacation Activity decision. It is quantified as the highest price the decision-maker is willing to pay for being able to know
Weather Forecast before making
Vacation Activity decision. Note that it is essentially the value of perfect information on
Weather Forecast.
Formal The above definition illustrates that the value of imperfect information of any uncertainty can always be framed as the value of perfect information, i.e., VoC, of another uncertainty, hence only the term VoC will be used onwards.
Standard Consider a general decision situation having
n decisions (
d1,
d2,
d3, ...,
dn) and
m uncertainties (
u1,
u2,
u3, ...,
um).
Rationality assumption in standard individual decision-making philosophy states that what is made or known are not forgotten, i.e., the decision-maker has
perfect recall. This assumption translates into the existence of a linear ordering of these decisions and uncertainties such that; :*
di is made prior to making
dj if and only if
di comes before
dj in the ordering :*
di is made prior to knowing
uj if and only if
di comes before
uj in the ordering :*
di is made after knowing
uj if and only if
di comes after
uj in the ordering Consider cases where the decision-maker is enabled to know the outcome of some additional uncertainties earlier in his/her decision situation, i.e., some
ui are moved to appear earlier in the ordering. In such case, VoC is quantified as the highest price which the decision-maker is willing to pay for all those moves.
Generalized The standard then is further generalized in
team decision analysis framework where there is typically incomplete sharing of information among team members under the same decision situation. In such case, what is made or known might not be known in later decisions belonging to different team members, i.e., there might not exist linear ordering of decisions and uncertainties satisfying
perfect recall assumption. VoC thus captures the value of being able to know "not only additional uncertainties but also additional decisions already made by other team members" before making some other decisions in the team decision situation. ==Characteristics==