Preference Elicitation
Mostrando 1-5 de 5 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. Extração de preferências por meio de avaliações de comportamentos observados. / Preference elicitation using evaluation over observed behaviours.
Recently, computer systems have been delegated to accomplish a variety of tasks, when the computer system can be more reliable or when the task is not suitable or not recommended for a human being. The use of preference elicitation in computational systems helps to improve such delegation, enabling lay people to program easily a computer system with their ow
Publicado em: 2009
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2. Decision Support for Patient Preference-based Care Planning: Effects on Nursing Care and Patient Outcomes
Objective: While preference elicitation techniques have been effective in helping patients make decisions consistent with their preferences, little is known about whether information about patient preferences affects clinicians in clinical decision making and improves patient outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a decision support system
American Medical Informatics Association.
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3. Eliciting consumer preferences for health plans.
OBJECTIVE: To examine (1) what people say is important to them in choosing a health plan; (2) the effect, if any, that giving health plan information has on what people say is important to them; and (3) the effect of preference elicitation methods on what people say is important. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTINGS: A random sample of 201 Wisconsin state employees w
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4. Empirically defined health states for depression from the SF-12.
OBJECTIVE: To define objectively and describe a set of clinically relevant health states that encompass the typical effects of depression on quality of life in an actual patient population. Our model was designed to facilitate the elicitation of patients' and the public's values (utilities) for outcomes of depression. DATA SOURCES: From the depression panel
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5. Risk preference instability across institutions: A dilemma
In this article we use laboratory experiments to ask a fundamental question: Do individuals behave as if their risk preferences are stable across institutions? In particular, we study the decisions of cash-motivated subjects in the repeated play of three different institutions: a value elicitation procedure for the sale of a risky asset, an English clock auc
National Academy of Sciences.