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The Rationale and Clinical Relevance of Repertory Grid Technique

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1965
All forms of Repertory Grid technique are derivatives of an original proposed by G. A. Kelly (1955) as an integral part of the development of Personal Construct Theory (summarized Bannister, 1962). In essence, repertory grids are forms of sorting test.
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The Repertory Grid Technique as a Personnel Tool

Management Decision, 1976
The past few years have seen the emergence of a new technique of considerable generality into the personnel field. It is based on the Personal Construct Theory of the psychologist George Kelly and incorporates a wide range of approaches to the assessment and measurement of people.
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An Application of Repertory Grid Technique to Aesthetic Measurement

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1976
The repertory grid technique was used to measure the responses of three groups of subjects to slides of 12 paintings. Subjects in Groups I and II were then exposed to information relevant to the paintings. In Group III subjects received information which was not directly relevant to the paintings. Grids were then re-elicited.
D. P. A. O'hare, I. E. Gordon
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Analysis of web sites with the repertory grid technique

CHI '01 extended abstracts on Human factors in computer systems - CHI '01, 2001
The Repertory Grid Technique (RGT) is presented as an approach to analyse and evaluate the user-perceived "character" of web site designs. The RGT reveals the participants' personal perceptions and preferences. This information supports the design of an appealing user experience.
Marc Hassenzahl, Tibor Trautmann
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Capturing tacit architectural knowledge using the repertory grid technique (NIER track)

Proceedings of the 33rd International Conference on Software Engineering, 2011
Knowledge about the architecture of a software-intensive system tends to vaporize easily. This leads to increased maintenance costs. We explore a new idea: utilizing the repertory grid technique to capture tacit architectural knowledge. Particularly, we investigate the elicitation of design decision alternatives and their characteristics.
Tofan, Dan   +2 more
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A comparison of the implication and repertory grid techniques

British Journal of Psychology, 1978
The ‘repertory grid’ and the ‘implication grid’ techniques are compared using criteria based on an indirect measure of construct matching scores. The implication grid proved superior to the repertory grid under conditions designed to compare stability of matching scores and under conditions designed to compare sensitivity to subjects' changes in ...
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Using the repertory grid technique for mining design patterns

Proceedings of the 20th European Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs, 2015
In this focus group, we investigated the use of the Repertory Grid Technique to mine design patterns in a methodical manner.
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Repertory Grid Technique as a Group Psychotherapy Research Instrument

Group Analysis, 1992
This article provides a brief description of repertory grid technique and the measures which can be derived from it which may be of value to the investigator of group therapy. It reviews the technique `s application in this area of research, with particular reference to studies of group therapy outcome, studies of the prediction of therapeutic change ...
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Reducing Architectural Knowledge Vaporization by Applying the Repertory Grid Technique

2011
The architecture of a software-intensive system is the composition of architectural design decisions. These decisions are an important part of Architectural Knowledge (AK). Failure to document architectural design decisions can lead to AK vaporization and higher maintenance costs.
Tofan, D., Galster, M., Avgeriou, P.
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The Use of the Repertory Grid Technique in the Individual Case

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1965
The terms “macrocosm” and “microcosm” have been taken by Jung from the traditions of the alchemists and the philosophy of Leibnitz for expressing his theories, but they are not often used elsewhere in psychiatry or psychology so it may be as well to define them when introducing them here.
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