Desirability–doability group judgment framework for the collaborative multicriteria evaluation of public policies
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6080603
DOI10.1111/itor.13261MaRDI QIDQ6080603
Ana C. L. Vieira, Carlos A. Bana e Costa, Teresa C. Rodrigues, Mónica Duarte Oliveira
Publication date: 4 October 2023
Published in: International Transactions in Operational Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
desirabilityMulticriteria analysisMACBETHscenariospolicy evaluationelicitation protocolsdoabilitysocio-technical framework
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Facilitated modelling in operational research
- Aiding decisions with multiple criteria. Essays in honor of Bernard Roy.
- Decision support systems in action: Integrated application in a multicriteria decision aid process
- Analyzing cognitive maps to help structure issues or problems
- Modeling uncertainty in multi-criteria decision analysis
- Collaborative development of composite indices from qualitative value judgements: the EURO-HEALTHY population health index model
- Transparent prioritisation, budgeting and resource allocation with multi-criteria decision analysis and decision conferencing
- Measurable Multiattribute Value Functions
- Cognitive Processes and the Assessment of Subjective Probability Distributions
- Improving occupational health and safety risk evaluation through decision analysis
- MACBETH — An interactive path towards the construction of cardinal value functions
- Decision Analysis with Geographically Varying Outcomes: Preference Models and Illustrative Applications
- Preference Sensitivity Analyses for Multi-Attribute Decision Support
- Prioritisation of public investments in social infrastructures using multicriteria value analysis and decision conferencing: a case study
- On (Measurable) Multiattribute Value Functions: An Expository Argument
- Health insurance risk assessment using cognitive mapping and multiple‐criteria decision analysis
- Techniques to model uncertain input data of multi‐criteria decision‐making problems: a literature review
- Gamified environmental multi‐criteria decision analysis: information on objectives and range insensitivity bias
This page was built for publication: Desirability–doability group judgment framework for the collaborative multicriteria evaluation of public policies