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Towards a better understanding of dynamics of IT use a new concept of adaptive IT use /Sun, Heshan. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Syracuse University, 2007. / "Publication number: AAT 3295549."
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Social capital and the third choiceOuderkirk, Simon A. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Philosophy, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Risk taking and resource scarcity : an integrative approach to foraging problems /Goldshmidt, Jay N. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 1997. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 108-113).
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Evaluating a staff development programme using an interpersonal-environment approach to facilitating self-determination of adults with intellectual disabilities in Hong Kong a pretest-posttest control group design /Wong, King-shui, Phylis. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2004. / Title proper from title frame. Also available in printed format.
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Determinants of how undergraduate students attend to and perceive features of elective coursesWolf, Mark B. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D)--Psychology, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2010. / Committee Chair: Phillip L. Ackerman; Committee Chair: Ruth Kanfer; Committee Member: Gary J. Lautenschlager; Committee Member: Lawrence R. James; Committee Member: Richard Catrambone. Part of the SMARTech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Collection.
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Bayesian nonparametric methods for some econometric problems /Lau, Wai Kwong. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 89-92). Also available in electronic version.
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The effects of functional communication training, choice making, and an adjusting work schedule on problem behavior maintained by negative reinforcementVan Norman, Renee Koehler, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2005. / Title from first page of PDF file. Document formatted into pages; contains vi, xii, 260 p.; also includes graphics. Includes bibliographical references (p. 175-195). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center
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A unified approach to the study of choice, conditioning, and timing /Guilhardi, Paulo. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Brown University, 2005. / Vita. Thesis advisor: Russell M. Church. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 101-107). Also available online.
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Paths on life’s way : destinations, determinants, and decisions in the transition from high schoolAndres, Lesley 05 1900 (has links)
This study investigated how and why individuals chose various post-high
school destinations. Theoretical frameworks based on Härnqvists (1978)
conceptualization of the determinants of educational choice, rational choice theory
as depicted by Elster (1986, 1989a, 1989b), and Bourdieu’s Theory of Practice (1977c,
1979, 1986, 1990b) were used to examine 1) the complex of individual and
institutional influences of educational choice, 2) the processes underlying the
decisions people made in choosing whether or not to pursue a post-secondary
education, and 3) how students in the midst of the transition from high school to
various post-high school destinations perceived these processes. Central to these
analyses are the concepts of cultural capital, primary and secondary social capital,
beliefs about and dispositions toward post-secondary education, academic capital,
and enabling capital in relation to post-high school status.
This research, conducted in British Columbia, has undertaken two kinds of
examination: 1) the exploration of choices made by a large sample of recent high
school graduates (n5345), as reported on a survey questionnaire and enriched by
corresponding Ministry of Education linked data and 2) two sets of intensive,
focused interviews conducted with a sample of Grade 12 students (n51) who were
in the process of making choices about post-high school destinations.
Three different types of analyses were conducted to explore the choice
process. First, discrirninant function analyses were carried out to determine which
individual and institutional determinants of educational choice, as depicted by
Härnqvist, best predicted post-high school group membership (non-participant,
non-university participant, university participant). Second, structural equation
modelling using LISREL VI was employed to unravel the processes, as depicted in
a model of Post-high School Status, that led to differential group membership.
Finally, interviews with Grade 12 students were carried out to explore students
perceptions of these processes.
In the first discrirninant analysis, non-participants and participants in postsecondary
education comprised the dichotomous grouping variable. Employing the
variables included in Härnqvists framework, 74% of the non-participants and 79%
of the participants could be correctly classified into their respective groups. The
most powerful predictor was curricular differentiation, followed by level of
education expected, total number of awards received, and primary social capital
(parental influence variables). In a second discriminant analysis with non-
university and university participants as the grouping variable, and based on the
same set of predictors, the type of post-secondary institution attended was correctly
predicted for 81% of university participants and 75% of non-university participants.
High school grade point average most strongly predicted group membership,
followed by curricular differentiation and level of education expected. Primary
social capital (parental influence variables) or secondary social capital (influence of
school personnel and peers) were not useful predictors in this analysis. In a three
group discriminant analysis (non-participant, non-university participant, and
university participant), the first function distinguished among these three groups
on academic capital variables, disposition variables, and parents as sources of
cultural capital, and the second discriminant function distinguished among the
groups on primary and secondary social capital variables and number of academic
awards received. Based on Härnqvist’s schema, 81% of university participants, 50%
of non-university participants, and 67% of non-participants were correctly
classified. Analyses by gender were also reported for each discriminant analysis.
In the second type of analysis, a theoretical model of Post-high School Status
was tested using LISREL VI. Strong positive relationships were demonstrated to
exist between academic capital and post-high school status, and between
dispositions toward post-secondary education and academic capital, for both males
and females. The effect of parents as sources of cultural capital on dispositions
toward post-secondary education was moderate, for both males and females. The
total effects of parental transmission of cultural and social capital on post-high
school destinations was significant. In these analyses, 58% of the variance in post-
high school destination for the male sample and 54% of the variance for the female
sample was explained.
In the third analysis, the processes of educational choice were further
explored through interviews with Grade 12 students. Of particular theoretical
interest were differences in students’ long term dispositions toward post-secondary
education, beliefs about post-secondary education, and how parents as sources of
primary social capital enabled their children to pursue higher education.
It was concluded that the treatment of two disparate strands of thinking
(rational choice theory and Bourdieu’s Theory of Practice) as complementary rather
than competing provide a coherent account of how students made choices about
post-high school destinations. The theoretical frameworks developed for this study
hold potential as a first step in revitalizing the investigation of equality of
educational opportunity. Implications for further research, theory development,
and policy directions are offered. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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An experimental investigation of the impact of computer based decision aids on the process of preferential choiceTodd, Peter A. January 1988 (has links)
This research examines the impact of Decision Support Systems (DSS) on the decision making process for preferential choice tasks. The potential impact of DSS on the decision process is evaluated in terms of how the system alters the decision maker's cognitive load. Competing hypotheses are developed based on the possible objectives of the decision maker with respect to decision effort and decision quality. One line of reasoning assumes that the DSS will be used in such a way as to maximise decision quality. The other asserts that the use of the DSS will be geared towards effort conservation. These hypotheses about the impact of the DSS on the decision process are tested in three experiments.
The three studies employed concurrent verbal protocols to capture data about the decision process. In experiment 1 subjects were placed in either and aided or unaided decision setting and given problems of either five or ten alternatives from which to make a choice. The results showed that decision strategy changed as a results of the use of the decision aid. In general, subjects behaved as effort minimisers. There were no significant effects related to the amount of information processing.
Experiment 2 was similar to experiment 1 except that subjects were given problems with either ten or twenty alternatives. The results were consistent with, though stronger than those of experiment 1. Almost all aided group subjects used Elimination by aspects strategy while the unaided group used a Conjunctive strategy. This is consistent with the notion of effort minimisation. There were no significant differences in the amount of information processing
Experiment 3 was designed to test whether the results in experiments 1 and 2 were a due to the tendency of decision makers to minimise effort or because the aid was not powerful enough to induce additive processing. In this study the DSS was altered to both increase the support for the additive difference strategy and reduce support for the elimination by aspects approach.
The results of experiment 3 show that decision makers tend to adapt their strategy to the type of decision aids available. There is evidence that if additive strategies are made sufficiently less effortful to use they will be employed. Similarly, when the degree of effort to follow a particular elimination strategy is manipulated decision makers tend to adapt in such a way as to minimise effort.
Overall the results of the three experiments are consistent in demonstrating the adaptivity of decision makers to the types of support tools available to them. This adaptivity centres around the minimisation of decision effort. It appears that decision makers are highly conscious of the effort required to make decisions and work in such a way as to minimise that expenditure. When faced with the use a decision aid they appear to calibrate their own decision effort to that provided by the decision aid. There is some evidence that sufficient changes in the relative effort required to use various strategies can lead decision makers to follow more effortful approaches than they might otherwise consider. The precise nature of this effort-accuracy relationship needs to be studied more closely.
The basic contribution of the dissertation has been to provide a formal approach for the study of DSS, based on concepts drawn from behavioural decision theory and information processing psychology. This work also has implications for behavioural decision theorists, consumer researchers and practical implications for the development of DSS in preferential choice settings. / Business, Sauder School of / Graduate
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