Results 221 to 230 of about 767,649 (269)
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Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2010
AbstractClient preferences are recognized as a key component to evidence‐based practice; however, research has yet to confirm the actual influence preferences have on treatment outcome. In this meta‐analysis, we summarize results from 35 studies that have examined the preference effect with adult clients.
Joshua K, Swift +2 more
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AbstractClient preferences are recognized as a key component to evidence‐based practice; however, research has yet to confirm the actual influence preferences have on treatment outcome. In this meta‐analysis, we summarize results from 35 studies that have examined the preference effect with adult clients.
Joshua K, Swift +2 more
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Are ambiguity preferences aligned with risk preferences?
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 2022Decisions under risk and ambiguity are frequently encountered in our daily lives, and the associated preferences are often quantified. This article deals with the relationship between individuals' preferences towards risk and ambiguity. In particular, we question the correlation of the preferences and their alignment.
Boun My, Kene +3 more
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Explaining Preferences and Preferring Explanations
2015In this paper we study the possibility of providing causal explanations for preferred answer sets, such as those obtained from logic programs with ordered disjunction LPODs. We use a recently defined multi-valued semantics for answer sets based on a causal algebra and consider its direct application to LPODs by several illustrating examples.
Pedro Cabalar, Jorge Fandiño
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Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2012
When people seek to impress others, they often do so by highlighting individual achievements. Despite the intuitive appeal of this strategy, we demonstrate that people often prefer potential rather than achievement when evaluating others. Indeed, compared with references to achievement (e.g., "this person has won an award for his work"), references to ...
Tormala, Zakary L. +2 more
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When people seek to impress others, they often do so by highlighting individual achievements. Despite the intuitive appeal of this strategy, we demonstrate that people often prefer potential rather than achievement when evaluating others. Indeed, compared with references to achievement (e.g., "this person has won an award for his work"), references to ...
Tormala, Zakary L. +2 more
openaire +5 more sources
Preference or preferences for landscape?
Journal of Environmental Psychology, 1994Abstract The research reported investigates whether landscape preference is a unitary concept and the role that physical and behavioural expectations for places could play in the cognitive categorization of landscapes into different types. Italian and Australian university students judged two examples of 12 types of scenes from their home ...
A.T. Purcell +3 more
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Aesthetic preference and lateral preferences
Neuropsychologia, 1986Subjects expressed preference for original or mirror-reversed versions of paintings. Hand preference predicted a significant proportion of the choice variance, but eye, foot and ear preference did not, nor did family sinistrality.
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Journal of Economic Theory, 2009
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Ehud Lehrer, Roee Teper
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zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Ehud Lehrer, Roee Teper
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A preference for preference: Lack of subjective preference evokes dehumanization
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2021Abstract The current research examines the link between subjective preferences and humanity. Six studies (n = 2920) find that people dehumanize others who are perceived to lack subjective preference. Establishing the basic effect, a person without preferences is perceived as less human than someone with preferences, which is driven by the perception ...
Jessica M. Lopez +2 more
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Sixth IEEE International Workshop on Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks (POLICY'05), 2005
In the context of network management, Chomicki, Lobo and Naqvi have defined the specification language Policy Description Language (PDL) and later extended it by introducing monitors: constraints on the actions that the network manager can execute simultaneously.
E. BERTINO +2 more
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In the context of network management, Chomicki, Lobo and Naqvi have defined the specification language Policy Description Language (PDL) and later extended it by introducing monitors: constraints on the actions that the network manager can execute simultaneously.
E. BERTINO +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Economists’ Preferences and the Preferences of Economists
Environmental Values, 1994Economists, who adopt the principle of consumer sovereignty, treat preferences as unquestioned for the purposes of their analysis. They also represent preferences for future outcomes as having value in the present. It is shown that these two characteristics of neoclassical modelling rest on similar reasoning and are essential to achieve high ...
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