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Activity Number: 349
Type: Topic Contributed
Date/Time: Tuesday, August 11, 2015 : 10:30 AM to 12:20 PM
Sponsor: Section on Bayesian Statistical Science
Abstract #314973 View Presentation
Title: A Multiresolution Stochastic Process Model for Predicting Basketball Possession Outcomes
Author(s): Daniel Cervone* and Alex D'Amour and Luke Bornn and Kirk Goldsberry
Companies: and Harvard University and Harvard University and Harvard University
Keywords: spatiotemporal modeling ; gaussian processes ; sports ; hierarchical models ; stochastic processes
Abstract:

Basketball games evolve continuously in space and time as players constantly interact with their teammates, the opposing team, and the ball. However, current analyses of basketball outcomes rely on discretized summaries of the game that reduce such interactions to tallies of points, assists, and similar events. In this paper, we propose a framework for using optical player tracking data to estimate, in real time, the expected number of points obtained by the end of a possession. This quantity, called expected possession value (EPV), derives from a stochastic process model for the evolution of a basketball possession; we model this process at multiple levels of resolution, differentiating between continuous, infinitesimal movements of players, and discrete events such as shot attempts and turnovers. Transition kernels are estimated using hierarchical spatiotemporal models that share information across players while remaining computationally tractable on very large data sets. In addition to estimating EPV, these models reveal novel insights on players' decision-making tendencies as a function of their spatial strategy.


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