Moreover, we will see that the answer to this
question can be quantified by obtaining the
area under an ROC curve (AUC): the larger
the area, the better the discrimination.First, we provide the two ROCs derived from
hypothetical Models 1 and 2 that we consid-
ered in the previous section. Notice that the
ROC for each model is determined by connect-
ing the dots that plot pairs of Se and 1Sp
values obtained for several classification
cut-points.For Model 1, the area under the ROC is 1.0.In contrast, for Model 2, the area under the
ROC is 0.5.Since the area under the ROC for Model 1 is
twice that for Model 2, we would conclude that
Model 1 has better discriminatory performance
than Model 2.How can we explain this conceptually?
Our explanation:
The AUC measuresdiscrimination, that is, the
ability of the model to correctly classify those
with and without the disease. We would expect
a model that provides good discrimination to
have the property that true cases have a higher
predicted probability (of being classified as a
case) than true noncases. In other words, we
would expect the true positive rate (TPR¼Se)
to be higher than the false positive rate (FPR
¼ 1 Sp) for all cut-points.Area under
ROC (AUC)1 – Sp (= FPR)Se (= TPR)
1.01.0́́́́́EXAMPLEAUC = 1.0Model 11 – Sp (= FPR)Se (= TPR)1.00.6 1.00.60.1
0.0Cut-pt for prefect
prediction: Se=Sp= 1AUC = 0.5Model 21 – Sp (= FPR)Se (= TPR)0.1 0.6 0.91.00.00.10.60.80.91.0So why is Model 1 a better dis-
criminator than Model 2?
Good discrimination
,
TPR>FPR
where
Se¼TPR,1Sp¼FPR356 10. Assessing Discriminatory Performance of a Binary Logistic Model