Published: Nov 18, 2024
Revised: Jul 28, 2025
Academic article
  • Academic article

The Forecasting Proficiency Test: A General Use Assessment of Forecasting Ability

The Forecasting Proficiency Test: A General Use Assessment of Forecasting Ability
We developed a one-hour Forecasting Proficiency Test (FPT) that explains 75% of the variance in forecasters' accuracy about a wide variety of events.
Mark Himmelstein*,1,2, Sophie Ma Zhu2,3, Nikolay Petrov2,4,Ezra Karger2,5, Jessica Helmer1,2, Sivan Livnat1,2, Page Hedley2, Amory Bennett2,6, and Philip E. Tetlock2,7 ,
1 Georgia Institute of Technology
2 Forecasting Research Institute
3 University of British Columbia
4 University of Cambridge
5 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
6 Quorum, LLC
7 University of Pennsylvania
* Corresponding Author. Contact: mhimmelstein3@gatech.edu
Published: Nov 18, 2024
Revised: Jul 28, 2025
Mark Himmelstein*,1,2, Sophie Ma Zhu2,3, Nikolay Petrov2,4,Ezra Karger2,5, Jessica Helmer1,2, Sivan Livnat1,2, Page Hedley2, Amory Bennett2,6, and Philip E. Tetlock2,7

Abstract

Accurate predictions about the future are crucial for optimizing policy choices, but finding skilled forecasters is challenging. Large forecasting tournaments can identify generalist superforecasters who make reliably accurate predictions across domains, but such tournaments take months to complete and do little to explain why these forecasters perform at a consistently high level. We solve these problems by developing a one-hour Forecasting Proficiency Test (FPT) that explains 75% of the variance in forecasters’ accuracy about a wide variety of events and provides new evidence about the mechanisms that make some people better forecasters than others. Specialized cognitive abilities, including base rate sensitivity and Bayesian reasoning, uniquely predict forecasters’ accuracy even when controlling for more traditional measures of general intelligence. The FPT also includes carefully chosen real-world forecasting questions that produce interpretable and exchangeable test scores. The top 20% of testees made forecasts with accuracy comparable to previously identified superforecasters; and two-thirds of superforecasters had FPT scores above the 75th percentile. The creation of an effective test of forecasting proficiency expands our understanding of human intelligence and provides an important tool for decision-makers who rely on accurate probabilistic predictions to make high-stakes decisions that impact the lives of millions.

1 Georgia Institute of Technology
2 Forecasting Research Institute
3 University of British Columbia
4 University of Cambridge
5 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
6 Quorum, LLC
7 University of Pennsylvania
* Corresponding Author. Contact: mhimmelstein3@gatech.edu
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