Human Judgment and Decision Making: Theories, Methods, and ProceduresPraeger, 1980 - 258 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 23
Seite 153
... independence or until the analyst restructured the problem so that the alternatives could be described on a set of attributes for which preferential independence was satisfied . 13.8.2 Behavioral Decision Theory ( SMART ) Gardiner and ...
... independence or until the analyst restructured the problem so that the alternatives could be described on a set of attributes for which preferential independence was satisfied . 13.8.2 Behavioral Decision Theory ( SMART ) Gardiner and ...
Seite 205
... Independence / Dependence The concepts of preferential and utility independence / dependence refer to whether the utility , value , or desirability of levels of an attribute change as a function of levels of other attributes . These ...
... Independence / Dependence The concepts of preferential and utility independence / dependence refer to whether the utility , value , or desirability of levels of an attribute change as a function of levels of other attributes . These ...
Seite 206
... independence is established via a series of questions involving choices among paired comparisons . This procedure is similar to that described immediately below for the assessment of utility independence . Utility independence is ...
... independence is established via a series of questions involving choices among paired comparisons . This procedure is similar to that described immediately below for the assessment of utility independence . Utility independence is ...
Inhalt
THEORY | 6 |
Introduction to Theory | 17 |
Scope | 31 |
Urheberrecht | |
16 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aggregation aids alternatives analysis appears applied asked attributes basic behavior Brunswik causal Chapter characteristics choice claims cognitive combinations common complex concepts concerned construction correct criterion cues decision maker DECISION THEORY decomposition defined described descriptive developed dimensions direct discussed distinction Edwards effects efforts empirical environment environmental evaluation example formal function given Group Group II approaches Hammond human idiographic important independence indicate individuals inference integration intended interest involving judges judgment and decision knowledge levels logical major means measurement methods multiple nomothetic noted objective observable optimality organizing principles persons possible preference present probability problem procedures processes psychological questions regard relative representativeness require respect response scale similar six approaches social specific statistical stimuli studies subjective task theoretical theorists Tversky uncertainty usually utility variables various weights