| Hogarth, R., Judgement and Choice. 1987, Chichester, New York: John Wiley. |
....roles played by knowledge in the application task. 1. Background Software design for complex knowledge intensive processes is a challenging problem solving task for a software engineer. Stringent cognitive effort is required for the development of large knowledge intensive systems [1, 2]. The elicitation of large amounts of domainspecific knowledge (i.e. knowledge about the workings of the application area) and task knowledge (i.e. knowledge about the more general problem solving activities that apply the domain specific knowledge) required for the validation, construction, and ....
Hogarth, R., Judgement and Choice. 1987, Chichester, New York: John Wiley.
....A surprising fact is that papers on applications do not report any problems in weight elicitation. Nor do they explain how the errors in weighting had been avoided. Yet, it is well known that human decision making behavior violates many of the theoretical assumptions of these methods (see e.g. [15]) One important factor which has not been recognized clearly enough is the fact that different methodological procedures assume different preference models. The AHP and its variants are theoretically based on ratio scale measurement whereas multiattribute value tree models are using an interval ....
Hogarth, R.M., Judgement and Choice, New York, John Wiley & Sons. 1980.
....the voice of the customer taking place number two. 2. DECISION MAKING AND RATIONALITY 14 The objective of this section is not to go through descriptive and normative research areas in detail. Several aspects of normative research are covered below. For introductions into descriptive research see [38, 34]. Here we will discuss the role of rationality, which is a general theme that ties all of the three approaches together. When prescriptive decision research tries to help people decide better , the meaning of better is often explicitly or implicitly closely related to rationality. The ....
Hogarth, R. M. Judgement and Choice, 2nd ed. Wiley, 1987.
....physical measurements the noise results from perturbations of the measurement process, while for statistical samples it is caused by sampling fluctuations. For expert judgements measurement noise can be used to model the large fluctuations and incoherence of probability values specified by experts [6]. Suppose an independent investigator has the task to combine these measurements. For him the measurement values q r and the corresponding probabilities p(C r jB r ) are part of the external world about which he is uncertain and whose random relation is captured by a measurement ....
Hogarth, R.M. (1987): Judgement and Choice, 2nd edition, Wiley, Chichester
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