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Cultural influences on the judgment and decision process weighing evidence in America and China /Wu, Shali. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Chicago, 2007. / Adviser: Boaz Keysar. Includes bibliographical references.
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The role of conscious and unconscious thought in decision making. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collectionJanuary 2011 (has links)
Luo, Xueying. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 108-120). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstract and appendix also in Chinese.
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The constructive influence of affect on judgement and decision makingWhite, Lee January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Computerized group decision support for managerial choice/judgment tasks through facilitated preference formulation and utilization.Hong, Ilyoo Barry. January 1989 (has links)
In modern organizations where managers must constantly be dealing with an overload of information, it is often observed that participants in group decision processes either are not clearly aware of their specific preferences or that they are not capable of properly formulating those preferences. When this happens, inconsistent or incomplete expression of personal preferences and their use in decision making may lead to an unjustifiable outcome for the group. Due to this problem, the strengths and effectiveness of GDSS-supported group meetings may, in some situations, not be apparent. This dissertation develops a new approach to supporting group decision making, focusing on preference knowledge of individual participants in a group. A system architecture for the design of an MCDM (Multiple Criteria Decision Making) GDSS which facilitates the process of eliciting, formulating, utilizing, aggregating, and analyzing preferences for individuals within groups is presented. The architecture integrates multi-criteria decision making paradigms with a group decision support environment. A prototype has been developed in order to demonstrate the design feasibility of an architecture that centers around four phases of choice making: alternative generation, preference specification, alternative evaluation, and preference aggregation. The prototype is designed to support managerial choice and judgment processes in collaborative meetings. The intended problem domain of the model is semi-structured managerial decisions for which decision variables (attributes) can be represented in quantitative terms to some extent, yet for which evaluation of alternatives requires a high degree of intuition and personal analysis. The process of prototyping the proposed architecture and the results from a qualitative study have provided some instructive conclusions relating to MCDM GDSS design: (1) support for human choice strategies can be integrated into a GDSS, (2) appropriate management of preferences of group participants will facilitate collaborative decision processes, (3) hierarchical decomposition of a decision problem can provide structure to a problem and thereby reduce problem complexity, and (4) managerial decisions are appropriate problems to which the current approach can be applied.
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The effects of participation and information on group process and outcome /London, Manuel. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 1974. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 363-372). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center
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Essays on rational behavior in incomplete informationHan, Jae Joon 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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ORGANIZATIONAL PURCHASE DECISION MAKING: INFORMATION-PROCESSING STRATEGIES AND EVOKED SETS OF QUALIFIED SUPPLIERSLeBlanc, Ronald Peter January 1981 (has links)
This research project specifically investigates the use of information processing strategies by organizational buyers in the first stage of the supplier selection process, the selection of an evoked set of qualified suppliers. In this selection process it is hypothesized that the buyer's use of evaluation functions or information processing strategies is influenced by the task faced by the buyer. The varying levels of risk, familiarity and informational requirements of the buying situation should impact the use of the information processing strategies. Structured protocols--written descriptions of compensatory and noncompensatory information processing strategies--were used to determine the evaluation function which organizational buyers use to qualify suppliers into an evoked set. The data was collected in a field study of 135 organizational buyers from 76 different organizations. The subjects were interviewed about purchases they were presently working on in which suppliers had been selected but the final purchase decision was still pending. Identification of the buying task, new task, modified rebuy, and straight rebuy also utilized the structured protocol technique. Written descriptions, based on the constitutive definitions of Robinson and Farris (1967), were used to address the following research question: Is there a difference in the decision rules or information processing strategies utilized by organizational buyers in the development of an evoked set of qualified suppliers when the buyer is qualifying suppliers for a new task, modified rebuy, or straight rebuy buying task? In addition to the information gathered via the structured protocols, information was gathered about the level of risk, familiarity and information requirements of the purchasing task. This was done to gain a better understanding of the use of information-processing strategies by organizational buyers. Analysis of the data indicates that the buying task is related to the choice of an information-processing strategy. The data also support the contention that the organizational buyer will utilize any of the information-processing strategies in the selection of an evoked set of suppliers. Although the buying task was found to significantly influence the use of the information-processing strategies, the study shows that all of the strategies were reported as being used for each of the buying tasks. In addition to finding that the buying task influences the choice of an information-processing strategy, the data support the model of information processing presented. The model addressed the impact that risk, familiarity, and information load had on the use of the evaluation functions. The risk node of the model was supported by two of the five risk variables included in the study: product homogeneity and supplier homogeneity. At the familiarity nodes of the model, the subjective measures of familiarity which support the model are supplier familiarity and frequency of product purchase. Supplier familiarity was found to be significantly different between the weighted and unweighted compensatory strategies. The significant difference in the level of familiarity found in the use of the conjunctive and disjunctive information processing strategies is associated with the frequency of product purchase. The final nodal section of the information-processing model which was supported is the comparison of the conjunctive and lexicographic strategies. The lexicographic strategy was found to be used when there was a higher perceived number of suppliers capable of supplying the needed product. In general this study has shown that the situation in which suppliers are selected impacts the use of an information-processing strategy. The findings are consistent with the research and hypothesizing associated with the use of information-processing strategies by consumers.
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Decision-making styles associated with accidents : defining the high risk pilotAdams, Richard J. 01 April 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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The impact of taxation and financial factors on company investment : an examination using UK panel dataDevereux, Michael Peter January 1990 (has links)
This thesis examines the impact of taxation and financial factors on the level of investment in fixed assets by quoted manufacturing companies in the United Kingdom between 1971 and 1986. Its most important theme is that there exist substantial differences between companies in the way that they are affected by both taxation and financial factors. The empirical work therefore uses individual company accounting and stock market data (described in Appendix A) together with a detailed model of the corporation tax system (described in Appendix B) in order to exploit cross sectional as well as time series variation. Chapters 2 and 3 investigate the role played by taxation in the investment decision. Part of the cross sectional variation in taxation arises through 'tax exhaustion', caused by the asymmetric treatment of taxable profit and loss in UK corporation tax and restrictions on the use of the imputation system. Two investment equations, the first based on Tobin's Q and the second on the cost of capital in an Euler equation framework are developed from the same neoclassical model of the firm which explicitly models tax exhaustion and the role played by expectations. Each is a forward-looking model, which could be used for the purposes of simulating the effects of tax reform on investment, whether the reform is announced or unannounced, permanent or temporary. The results confirm that tax does play a role in the determination of investment, although, for various reasons, the precise effect is difficult to quantify. They also suggest that the Q model is a poor means of assessing the impact of taxation on investment and that it is dominated by the second model. Chapters 2 and 3 also consider the impact of taxation on company financial policy, and, in particular consider various regimes in which the company may find itself which depend on tax exhaustion and agency costs of debt. The stability of these regimes is more complex than commonly argued in the literature. The appropriate definition of the cost of capital is also developed further, under similar conditions, and a matrix of nine possible values is constructed, depending on the marginal source of finance in this period and the next period. Chapter 4 discusses the role played by financial factors. A model with legal constraints on financial behaviour and agency costs on debt is developed which predicts that, for all firms, investment depends on the level of cash generated, as well as Tobin's Q. The importance of cash flow for firms of different size and age is investigated. The results support the hypothesis that cash flow is a significant determinant of investment for all firms. Cash flow has the highest impact for large and new firms.
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Creative decision-taking within client-advertising agency relationsMichell, P. C. N. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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