Results 261 to 270 of about 401,905 (313)
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Experiments in Constrained Choice
Journal of Consumer Research, 1987This article examines the relative importance of a variety of factors in influencing hierarchical choice. In our first experiment, we test some implications of Tversky and Sattath's (1979) Hierarchical Elimination Model (HEM) relating to a choice set in which an external constraint has been imposed.
Kahn, Barbara +2 more
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
The decision maker is assumed to observe a large number of experiments. The paper presents conditions for the existence of a unique prior over distributions that generate each of the observed samples. The axioms over experiments admit a recursive non-expected utility representation over two-stage lotteries (Klibanoff et al., 2005).
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The decision maker is assumed to observe a large number of experiments. The paper presents conditions for the existence of a unique prior over distributions that generate each of the observed samples. The axioms over experiments admit a recursive non-expected utility representation over two-stage lotteries (Klibanoff et al., 2005).
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The No—Choice Alternative in Conjoint Choice Experiments
International Journal of Market Research, 2001Conjoint choice designs are frequently applied in practice, and often a base alternative is added to the design. When such a 'no-choice' base alternative is present in conjoint choice experiments a constant term should be added to the design ('X'-) matrix with attribute dummies when effects type and/or linear coding is used for the attribute levels ...
Haaijer, R, Kamakura, W, Wedel, M
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Patient Preferences for Provider Choice: A Discrete Choice Experiment
The American Journal of Managed Care, 2020There is an ongoing policy discussion regarding an adequate breadth of provider networks. Health plans with "restricted networks" of providers have proved surprisingly popular on the Affordable Care Act health insurance exchanges because of a substantial gap in premiums between plans with open networks and closed networks.
Eline M, van den Broek-Altenburg +1 more
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2023
Due to increasing healthcare costs across the world, limited resources have to be spent wisely. Considering the necessary, optimal provision financing of healthcare, economic techniques have a great potential to provide additional evidence to more traditional methodologies. One recently developed and adopted approach in health economics is the discrete
Folkvord, Frans +3 more
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Due to increasing healthcare costs across the world, limited resources have to be spent wisely. Considering the necessary, optimal provision financing of healthcare, economic techniques have a great potential to provide additional evidence to more traditional methodologies. One recently developed and adopted approach in health economics is the discrete
Folkvord, Frans +3 more
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Anaesthetics: career choices and experiences
Medical Education, 1990Summary. At the pre‐registration stage, about 4% of doctors who qualified in 1974 and about 5% of 1977 qualifiers gave anaesthetics as a first choice of career. Over the few years after qualifying, both cohorts showed a net gain in career preferences for anaesthetics.
J, Parkhouse, D J, Ellin
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2008
Duncan Black (1948) and Kenneth Arrow (1963) raised the key question of collective choice: if people have different preferences for policy outcomes are there general mechanisms that can (always) aggregate those preferences in consistent and coherent ways? The answer is ‘no’.
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Duncan Black (1948) and Kenneth Arrow (1963) raised the key question of collective choice: if people have different preferences for policy outcomes are there general mechanisms that can (always) aggregate those preferences in consistent and coherent ways? The answer is ‘no’.
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Inconsistent behavior in lottery choice experiments
Behavioral Science, 1967College students made choices in binary lottery situations involving small amounts of money-payoffs ranged from $2.50 to -$1.00. Each of 52 subjects made 150 choices. Any of a number of choice models might be used to describe the outcome of such an experiment.
F, Trenery Dolbear, L B, Lave
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2005
Abstract One of the greatest challenges facing health economists is the identification and valuation of benefits from health care interventions. Until the 1990s benefit assessment in health economics was dominated by an assumption that health was the only important outcome from health care.
Ryan, Mandy, Gerard, Karen
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Abstract One of the greatest challenges facing health economists is the identification and valuation of benefits from health care interventions. Until the 1990s benefit assessment in health economics was dominated by an assumption that health was the only important outcome from health care.
Ryan, Mandy, Gerard, Karen
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Effects coding in discrete choice experiments
Health Economics, 2005This paper discusses the inherent problems associated with applying dummy coding when including a fixed comparator in a discrete choice experiment, and seeks to illustrate the misinterpretations that may arise if the analyst is not aware of the problem.
Bech, Mickael, Gyrd-Hansen, Dorte
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