Absolute Performance Measure
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
An Absolute Performance Measure is a performance measure that measures system performance against fixed standards or objective criterions without relative comparisons to other systems or human baselines.
- AKA: Standalone Performance Measure, Non-Comparative Measure, Objective Performance Measure, Fixed-Standard Measure.
- Context:
- It can typically provide Consistent Measurements across evaluation contexts.
- It can typically use Predefined Thresholds for performance assessment.
- It can often enable Historical Tracking of system improvements.
- It can often support Requirement Verification against specifications.
- It can facilitate Cross-Domain Comparisons using universal scales.
- It can eliminate Reference Dependency simplifying evaluation setup.
- It can reduce Evaluation Variance from human baseline variation.
- It can integrate with Automated Testing Frameworks for continuous evaluation.
- It can range from being a Binary Absolute Measure to being a Continuous Absolute Measure, depending on its value space.
- It can range from being a Single-Dimension Absolute Measure to being a Multi-Dimension Absolute Measure, depending on its measurement scope.
- It can range from being a Task-Specific Absolute Measure to being a General Absolute Measure, depending on its application breadth.
- It can range from being a Threshold-Based Absolute Measure to being a Scale-Based Absolute Measure, depending on its scoring method.
- ...
- Examples:
- Accuracy-Based Measures, such as:
- Error-Based Measures, such as:
- Efficiency Measures, such as:
- ...
- Counter-Examples:
- Human Parity Measure, which requires human comparison.
- Relative Performance Measure, which compares system-to-system.
- Preference-Based Measure, which uses subjective judgment.
- See: Performance Measure, Human Parity Measure, Evaluation Measure, Objective Measurement, Fixed Standard, Automated Evaluation, Benchmark Score.