One-reason decision making unveiled: A measurement model of the recognition heuristic.

2010 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin E. Hilbig ◽  
Edgar Erdfelder ◽  
Rüdiger F. Pohl
2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (10) ◽  
pp. 1408-1436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Revilla ◽  
Desirée Knoppen

Purpose – There are two major objectives in the research. First, the authors investigate the impact of knowledge integration in terms of joint decision-making and joint sense-making, on relational performance, including operational efficiency and innovation. Second, the authors examine the key antecedents that might facilitate knowledge integration: strategic supply management and trust. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach – This paper expands and tests theory drawing upon survey data from 133 buyer-supplier relationships (BSRs). The authors employed a two-step process of analysis to evaluate first the measurement model and then the structural model. The measurement model test built upon confirmatory factor analysis, while the structural model quality test built upon path analysis. Findings – The results suggest that both integrative mechanisms, joint decision making and joint sense making, affect performance although in different ways. This study also finds that while trust has multiple significant influences and consequently must be viewed as an organizing principle, strategic supply management is required to jointly understand the dynamic and complex context but not to jointly make ongoing decisions. Research limitations/implications – Three limitations: first, this study was cross-sectional rather than longitudinal. Second, in line with accepted practice, the authors surveyed only one side of the relationship. The suppliers’ viewpoint is thus not fully taken into account. Third, another potential limitation of the study is that the sample stems from just one country and its size does not distinguish subgroups in the analysis of the path model. Practical implications – Managers should be advised that: first, a trusting partnership built on knowledge integration is a hard order, especially with a new, unknown supplier in a low-cost country, where intellectual property protection is less obvious; second, strategic supply management may not improve cost or operational performance, but in its absence, it is unlikely that a supplier has insight into the exact needs of its buyer and thus, may not add considerable value to their customers; third, building a dynamic knowledge integration capability (valuable, rare, and difficult to imitate) takes time, as does creating reliable learning mechanisms. Joint teams, visit partners’ workplace, early involve suppliers in developing new products or selection of supplier with high-learning capabilities may help to create a knowledge integration capability. Social implications – The authors suggest that companies should move from an arm-length relationship and turn their supplier relationships into a tool for innovating faster while cutting cost. In order to do this, joint sense-making and joint decision should be seen as institutionalized inter-firm routines rather than ad hoc activities. Thus, the authors recommend managers to proactively build certain knowledge-based capabilities that hinges heavily upon a strategic stance toward supply management and trustful relationships with selected suppliers. Originality/value – The major intent of this research is to expand understanding of knowledge integration by building a more testable, complex model around its creation. While previous research relied on a configuration approach to explore the relationship between knowledge integration and performance, the authors evaluate causal relationships at the level of the formative dimensions rather than higher order knowledge integration, as this has proven to be a superior analytical method. Second, although supply chain scholars have expressed great interest in trust, an in-depth examination of prior studies in knowledge integration indicate that trust has been analyzed alone. In contrast, the study empirically examines the simultaneous effect of trust and strategic supply management in BSRs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 141
Author(s):  
Ade M. Adiandari, Bambang Sumintono, Yuliani

Financial attitudes in emergency fund ownership decision-making are important in shaping decision-making behavior to have an emergency fund. In order to obtain an accurate profile of financial attitudes in emergency fund ownership decision-making, it required a good instrument with precise measurement model. This study focuses on developing a financial attitude scale in emergency fund ownership decision-making using Rasch model. The participants were 106 respondents and after going through 2 analysis process stages using Winsteps, the instruments possessed a very decent reliability index, both from alpha cronbach’s and item reliability value. The items has also met the accuracy of the item model, the unidimensionality number was above the standard, as well as the unexplainable variance by the instruments was not exceed the standard. Overall, it can be concluded that financial attitude scale in emergency fund ownership decision-making held a decent psychometric attitude, so that this attitude scale can be used to a second stage pilot test process with a larger number of respondents.


2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 95
Author(s):  
I Cenik Ardana ◽  
Elizabeth Sugiarto D ◽  
Yuniarwati Yuniarwati

Specifically, the purpose of this study is: (1) to test the validity and reliability of the measurement model of Fisher's spiritual well-being (SWB) construct (2010); (2) to test the validity and reliability of the measurement model of Forsyth’s ethical orientation of decision-making (EDM) construct (1980), and (3) to examine the correlation of Fisher’s SWB variables with Forsyth’s EDM variables (1980). Testing instruments or measurement models  uses confirmatory factor analysis and Cronbach Alpha's reliability and testing correlation uses Perlson's correlation. The data is processed with SPSS version 22. The results of this study showed that: (1) the measurment model of Fisher’s  SWB construct is valid and reliable; (2) the measurment model of Forsyth’s EDM construct is also valid and reliable. It is also concluded that there is a positive and significant correlation between ideal spiritual well-being (ISWB) construct, either in whole (ISWB) and each dimension (ICSWB, IPSWB, ITSWB, IESWB) with ideal ethical orientation of decision-making (IEDM). There is also a positive and significant relationship between lived spiritual well-being (LSWB) construct as a whole with  relative ethical orientation of decision-making (REDM). In testing the correlation of each dimension of LSWB construct (LCSWB, LPSWB, LTSWB, LESWB) with  REDM construct, despite all the dimensions of LSWB shows positive correlations  with REDM, but the level of significance of the association varies.


2014 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 1194-1216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Garzella ◽  
Raffaele Fiorentino

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to develop an effective synergy measurement model to support the decision-making process in mergers and acquisitions (M&A). Design/methodology/approach – Relevant literature is reviewed and critically assessed. An interpretive methodology is used to analyse empirical data from a questionnaire survey and interviews of M&A experts. A framework is provided with the objective to support the process of synergy measurement and the success of pre-deal planning. Findings – The authors find several mismatches in synergy measurement practices. The strategic factors, which are considered very relevant to generating reliable forecasts, are surprisingly not adequately quantified. On the contrary, a synergy measurement model may integrate the assessment of these factors: the type of synergy, the size of synergy, the timing of synergy and the likelihood of achievement. Practical implications – The paper offers interesting implications for firms, advisors and consultants, pointing out that synergy measurement issues are related to the analysis of strategic factors affecting synergy. These findings suggest that the pre-planning process should integrate people and tools from different backgrounds, from strategy to accounting, to effectively measure the synergy value. The authors also suggest the development of new tools in response to the needs of practitioners for best practices in M&A. Originality/value – This paper highlights that the effective use of synergy measurement models are critical to improve the success of M&A due diligence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (02) ◽  
pp. 142-153
Author(s):  
Yasir Hayat Mughal

Decision making is most important factor in organizations. It was essential to introduce the new instrument which could help the employees to make spontaneous decisions. The mix methods research was used. Data was collected from 511 respondents using survey. Reliability and validity factor analysis (EFA & CFA) identified four dimensions of intuition i.e. experience, judgment, thinking and emotion/gut feeling styles. The main contribution of this study is refinement of analytic-intuitive style dimension by splitting intuition into four more dimensions. Initial instrument was developed having 95 items for five dimensions Emotional Style (26-Items), Experience style (27-Items), thinking style (15-Items), Feeling style (10-Items) and the Judgmental style (12-Items). Thus, total 800 questionnaires were distributed randomly of which 685 were retrieved. The measurement model was developed and tested in the SPSS and AMOS-SEM. The newly developed instrument was found valid and reliable having 12 final items, 3 items for each construct likewsie (experience, judgment, thinking and emotion/gut feeling style.


Author(s):  
Kateřina Ryglová ◽  
Jitka Machalová ◽  
Ida Vajčnerová

Tourism is globally considered to be one of the most prospective and dynamic economic branches. However, with respect to highly competitive environment of tourism it has to be professionally organized and managed. The presented article aims to show possibilities of interconnecting marketing tools with the potential of spatial modelling with the objective of making decision-making processes in tourism easier and more efficient (for companies, clients as well as destination managements). The paper deals with the modification of the customer satisfaction measurement model in tourism with possibilities of spatial modelling tools. In the publication the ECSI model (European Customer Sa­tisfaction Index) is modified for the area of tourism, with respect to the fact that the obtained ­values of ECSI indexes can be utilized as introductory data for spatial modelling. The potential of the ECSI utilization is seen as a tool for managing decision-making processes in the area of increasing the quali­ty of tourism services by force of a detailed analysis and quantification of customer satisfaction. If we process the date about satisfaction from monitoring CzechTourism, and if we apply the use date on described ESCI model (the part satisfaction), we see, that the visitors are the most satisfaction with helpfulness (interval 73−87 %), namely in South-Bohemian, South-Moravian, and Zlin region, at least in Midle-Bohemian region. Obtaining own data and their following application and evaluation according to the modified ESCI model for all tourist regions will be the part of a follow-up research. The aim will be to summarize recommendations for individual regions in such a way that they have enough information for more successful utilization of their potential for the development of tourism.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 50
Author(s):  
Ganesh Sankaran ◽  
Martin Knahl ◽  
Guido Siestrup ◽  
Ismini Vasileiou

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 495
Author(s):  
Mette Kjer Kaltoft ◽  
Jesper Bo Nielsen ◽  
Jack Dowie

Background: Most existing multi-critierial instruments measuring the person-as-patient’s experience (PREMs like ‘decision quality’) or outcome (e.g., PROMs like ‘quality of life’) are designed for use as inputs into group level decision and guidelines. Regrettably, they elicit only the ratings of the individual respondent. They therefore lack person-centered preference-sensitivity in that the measure for the individual patient does not also reflect that patient’s relative weighting of the multiple items/criteria/indicators that constitute it. Some instruments may use weightings that are preference-based, but the preferences are almost always the average ‘tariff’ derived in a separate study, not those of the individual concerned. The aggregated results from such instruments cannot reflect the heterogeneous and potentially changing preferences of the patient population and in this sense are not the appropriate ‘living’ metrics.Personalisation: A preference-sensitive person-centered instrument reflects these weightings and is ‘dually-personalised’. Six possible degrees of personalisation are identified, varying in the ability of the individual respondent to customize the instrument. The appropriate level depends on the context and goals of the measurement. Higher levels of personalisation, such as those allowing the individual to generate the items, are unlikely to be of use in routine clinical practice, where dual and triple personalisation are the most practical. (In triple personalisation the respondent selects their criteria from a menu.)Constructs: Whether single or some higher degree of personalisation is appropriate depends on the nature of the construct. Formative constructs producing indexes, such as most PROMs/PREMS, do not exist independently of the instrument claiming to measure them. The multiple components of these instruments, such as pain and mobility, ‘cause’ the construct and are not caused by it. Measures of formative constructs should always be (at least) dually-personalised. In contrast, reflective constructs (such as Appendicitis), exist independently of measurement and the scale measure they produce should never be dually-personalised; the component cues are properly integrated by belief/evidential coefficients, not value judgments.Validation and Measurement models: Currently, most PROMs and PREMs are being treated as reflective indexes and are only singly-personalised. In breach of the COSMIN guidelines they are often ‘validated’ by criteria such as internal consistency and structural validity, using techniques such as Rasch or Item Response Theory, that are appropriate only for reflective scales. The output from applying a conjoint measurement model to a preference-sensitive construct (such as quality of life) is an appropriate input only in single-criterion decision-making, where the measured construct is the sole maximand. It is not appropriate in multi-criteria decision-making, because it has not involved the necessary separation of criterion weighting from option performance rating. Conclusion: Person-centered care will advance only when it is accepted that the central constructs are formative indexes and measurement of them needs to be individually preference-sensitive, not just group preference-based and therefore at least dually-personalised.


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