Results 261 to 270 of about 2,911,222 (308)
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2011
Consumers today have more control over media consumption than ever before, with interactive media helping to transform the industry away from a traditional publisher-centric focus towards a new dynamic user-centric model. Examples of prominent Web 2.0 media environments that support the creation, distribution and consumption of user-generated content ...
Terry Daugherty +3 more
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Consumers today have more control over media consumption than ever before, with interactive media helping to transform the industry away from a traditional publisher-centric focus towards a new dynamic user-centric model. Examples of prominent Web 2.0 media environments that support the creation, distribution and consumption of user-generated content ...
Terry Daugherty +3 more
openaire +1 more source
When the Expected Value Is Not Expected: A Conservative Approach
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics: Systems, 2016The takeoff point in this paper is a random variable ${X}$ for which large positive values are desired. When its probability distribution is highly skewed, the possibility of a long fat-tailed distribution can lead to an expected value, $ {\mu } {=}\mathbb {E}[ {X}]$ , which is unduly optimistic. For the reverse case when small values of $
Malekpour, S., Barmish, Bobby
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On the Expected Value of Fuzzy Events
International Journal of Uncertainty, Fuzziness and Knowledge-Based Systems, 2015Generalizing a first approach by L. A. ZADEH (J. Math. Anal. Appl. 23, 1968), expected values of fuzzy events are studied which are (up to standard boundary conditions) only required to be monotone. They can be seen as an extension of capacities, i.e., monotone set functions satisfying standard boundary conditions. Some of these expected values can be
Erich-Peter Klement, Radko Mesiar
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The Value and Expected Value of Knowledge
Dialogue, 2012ABSTRACT: Meno’s Thesis—the idea that knowing something is better than merely having a true belief about it—is incompatible with the joint claims that (a) believing the truth is the sole source of the value of knowledge and (b) true belief and knowledge are equally successful in believing the truth.
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A procedure for decision-making under risk is developed and axiomatized. It provides another explanation for the Allais paradox as well as justification for some other preference patterns that can not be represented by the expected utility model, but it ...
Robert Lapson
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An Axiomatic Foundation for the Expected Shortfall
Management Science, 2021Ruodu Wang, Ričardas Zitikis
exaly

