Most of the literature on scoring rules that I know of deals with discrete measurable spaces, but in this paper by Gneiting and Raferty a very general definition of a scoring rule is given. I don't see in the paper, however, any concrete examples of (strictly) proper scoring rules for general measurable spaces. I'm hoping someone can provide such an example.
Let me recall the setup (with some simplifications and minor modifications to suit my purposes). Let $(\Omega, \mathcal A)$ be a measurable space and let $\mathcal P$ be the set of probability measure on this space (Gneiting and Rafferty actually allow $\mathcal P$ to be any convex set of probability measures). A scoring rule $S: \mathcal P \times \Omega \to [-\infty, \infty)$ is a function that is measurable in its second argument. Write $$S(P,Q) = \int S(P, \omega)Q(d\omega).$$ Say that $S$ is (strictly) proper if $$S(P,P) \geq S(Q,P)$$ holds for all $P,Q \in \mathcal P$ (with equality iff $P=Q$).
A scoring rule $S$ is regular if $S(P,P) > -\infty$ for all $P \in \mathcal P$. Gneiting and Rafferty prove the following representation theorem.
A regular scoring rule is (strictly) proper if and only if there exists a (strictly) convex, real-valued function $G$ on $\mathcal P$ such that $$S(P, \omega) = G(P) - \int G^*(P, \omega')P(d\omega') + G^*(P,\omega)$$ for all $P \in \mathcal P$ and $\omega \in \Omega$, where the function $G^*(P, \cdot): \Omega \to [-\infty, \infty]$ (the subtangent of $G$ at $P$) is measurable and satisfies $$G(Q) \geq G(P) + \int G^*(P, \omega')(Q-P)(d\omega')$$ for all $Q \in \mathcal P$.
I'm looking for an example of a strictly proper scoring rule that illustrates the theorem and doesn't depend on $\Omega$ being countable. Since the strict properness fo $S$ implies that $S$ is regular, I suppose this amounts to choosing a strictly convex function $G$ that has a subtangent at every $P$. Is there an obvious or natural choice of such a function?