Results 271 to 280 of about 232,090 (299)
ABSTRACT This article argues that European Union (EU) peacebuilding scholarship can benefit from organizational research on the socio‐spatial dynamics of policy implementation. It introduces a strategic‐relational heuristic to address two key gaps: the marginalization of grassroots agency in spatial analyses and the separation of strategy from ...
Giada Lagana, Sioned Pearce
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This article addresses a critical issue in evidence‐informed policymaking: the challenge of translating knowledge into policy outputs amidst the complex interplay between research and politics. It discusses the concept of “blocked learning,” where individual‐level learning fails to scale up to organizational and policy levels, thus impeding ...
Thenia Vagionaki
wiley +1 more source
Best-worst scaling count analysis (n = 115).
Michelle M. Gill (8190498) +4 more
openalex +1 more source
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2015
Best-worst scaling (BWS) is an extension of the method of paired comparison to multiple choices that asks participants to choose both the most and the least attractive options or features from a set of choices. It is an increasingly popular way for academics and practitioners in social science, business, and other disciplines to study and model choice.
Louviere, Jordan +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Best-worst scaling (BWS) is an extension of the method of paired comparison to multiple choices that asks participants to choose both the most and the least attractive options or features from a set of choices. It is an increasingly popular way for academics and practitioners in social science, business, and other disciplines to study and model choice.
Louviere, Jordan +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Best-Worst Scaling with many items
Journal of Choice Modelling, 2019Abstract Best-worst scaling (BWS) has become so useful that practitioners feel pressure to include ever more items in their experiments. Researchers wanting more items and enough observations of each item by each respondent to support individual respondent-level utility models may greatly increase the burden on respondents, resulting in respondent ...
Keith Chrzan, Megan Peitz
openaire +1 more source
Best-worst scaling: theory and methods
2014Best-Worst Scaling (BWS) can be a method of data collection, and/or a theory of how respondents provide top and bottom ranked items from a list. BWS is increasingly used to obtain more choice data from individuals and/or to understand choice processes. The three “cases”of BWS are described, together with the intuition behind the models that are applied
T.N. Flynn, A.A.J. Marley
openaire +2 more sources
An examination of help‐seeking preferences via best–worst scaling
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2020AbstractObjectiveThis study utilized best–worst scaling and latent class analysis to assess mental health treatment preferences and identify subgroups of college student help seekers.MethodCollege students (N = 504; age: M = 20.3, 79.2% female) completed assessments of mental health treatment preferences, self‐stigma, and distress.ResultsStudents ...
Daniel G. Lannin +2 more
openaire +2 more sources

