Difference between revisions of "Conversion"

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{{confuse|[[downconversion]] (editing questions to be shorter and easier to use them for another purpose) or [[upconversion]] (the opposite)}}
 
{{confuse|[[downconversion]] (editing questions to be shorter and easier to use them for another purpose) or [[upconversion]] (the opposite)}}
In quizbowl jargon, '''conversion''' (or '''converting''' a question) is the act of [[get|getting a question correct]].
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In quizbowl jargon, '''conversion''' (or '''converting''' a question) is the act of getting a [[question]] correct.
 
The term can be understood as taking the words of a question and "converting" them into points for one's team.
 
The term can be understood as taking the words of a question and "converting" them into points for one's team.
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Conversion can be used as the counterpart to [[powering]], entailing getting a question for 10 points, or to represent that a [[team]] answered a question correctly at any point.
  
 
In most contexts, "conversion" refers to aggregate conversion (or conversion rate), usually across an entire tournament.
 
In most contexts, "conversion" refers to aggregate conversion (or conversion rate), usually across an entire tournament.

Revision as of 11:04, 11 September 2021

Not to be confused with downconversion (editing questions to be shorter and easier to use them for another purpose) or upconversion (the opposite).

In quizbowl jargon, conversion (or converting a question) is the act of getting a question correct. The term can be understood as taking the words of a question and "converting" them into points for one's team. Conversion can be used as the counterpart to powering, entailing getting a question for 10 points, or to represent that a team answered a question correctly at any point.

In most contexts, "conversion" refers to aggregate conversion (or conversion rate), usually across an entire tournament. So for example, bonus conversion generally refers to performance on all bonuses played across a tournament.

Various conversion metrics (like points per game and points per bonus) derived from conventional statistics can offer basic insight into team skill or tournament difficulty. On the other hand, conversion statistics, which specifically measure the conversion of individual questions, require more fine-grained data or special tools.