Results 301 to 310 of about 3,392,111 (365)
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Technologies and “Routinization”
2020This chapter presents and compares different approaches to the measurement of tasks, discussing their pros and cons and the problems that researchers encounter when testing theoretical constructs with available data. As an empirical application, the most representative framework is adopted and items across multiple data sources (EWCS, PIAAC, PDII, and ...
Federico Biagi, Raquel Sebastian Lago
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Collecting and Delivering Progress Feedback: A Meta-Analysis of Routine Outcome Monitoring
Psychotherapy, 2018This systematic review and meta-analysis examines the impact of measuring, monitoring, and feeding back information on client progress to clinicians while they deliver psychotherapy.
M. Lambert, J. Whipple, M. Kleinstäuber
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Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal, 2019
We addressed previous mixed findings regarding the effects of task routinization on employee creativity. We proposed that task routinization is not a single dimensional construct but that it has 2 dimensions, namely, content and process, which have different motivation and performance implications.
Hye Jung Yoon, Jin Nam Choi
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We addressed previous mixed findings regarding the effects of task routinization on employee creativity. We proposed that task routinization is not a single dimensional construct but that it has 2 dimensions, namely, content and process, which have different motivation and performance implications.
Hye Jung Yoon, Jin Nam Choi
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The Micropolitics of Routines and Routine “Improvement”
Abstract Previous research on routine dynamics has most commonly incorporated consideration of power, politics, and conflict by using the notion of “truce.” In this paper, the authors propose a novel approach to integrating theories of power and politics with those of routine dynamics, and illustrate it by drawing on an in-depth studyGeneviève Desbiens, Ann Langley
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The Routineness of Routines: Measuring Rhythms of Media Interaction
Human–Computer Interaction, 2013In a study of 10 information workers shadowed for 3 whole working days each, we utilize the construct of working sphere to model projects/tasks as a network of humans and artifacts. Employing a statistical technique called T-pattern analysis, we derive measures of routineness from these real-world data. In terms of routineness, we show that information
Norman Makoto Su +2 more
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Embracing Environmental Genomics and Machine Learning for Routine Biomonitoring.
Trends in Microbiology, 2019Genomics is fast becoming a routine tool in medical diagnostics and cutting-edge biotechnologies. Yet, its use for environmental biomonitoring is still considered a futuristic ideal.
T. Cordier +4 more
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Clinics in Laboratory Medicine
The term 'routine coagulation' typically applies to hemostasis tests routinely performed in hematology laboratories, often available 24/7, and potentially ordered urgently. These tests would comprise of the prothrombin time (PT), the PT converted to an international normalized ratio, the activated partial thromboplastin time (often called partial ...
Emmanuel J. Favaloro, Leonardo Pasalic
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The term 'routine coagulation' typically applies to hemostasis tests routinely performed in hematology laboratories, often available 24/7, and potentially ordered urgently. These tests would comprise of the prothrombin time (PT), the PT converted to an international normalized ratio, the activated partial thromboplastin time (often called partial ...
Emmanuel J. Favaloro, Leonardo Pasalic
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1973
To the Editor.— Did a recent case report inThe Journalreally support the author's appeal for "routine electrocardiography in all candidates for competitive athletics regardless of age?" (221:1047, 1972). A 20-year-old patient had well-documented, known congenital heart disease that she chose to conceal so she could do what she wanted.
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To the Editor.— Did a recent case report inThe Journalreally support the author's appeal for "routine electrocardiography in all candidates for competitive athletics regardless of age?" (221:1047, 1972). A 20-year-old patient had well-documented, known congenital heart disease that she chose to conceal so she could do what she wanted.
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Routine Disasters, Routine Injustice
NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy, 2023openaire +2 more sources
Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI)—a simple practical measure for routine clinical use
Clincal and Experimental Dermatology, 1994A. Finlay, G. K. Khan
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