A Cost???Benefit Analysis and Method of Creating High-Quality Posters for a Low Cost

2002 ◽  
Vol 112 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir M. Karamzadeh ◽  
Brian J. F. Wong ◽  
Roger L. Crumley
2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 517-586
Author(s):  
Patrice Garant ◽  
Huguette Pagé

The Ombudsman is one of the three recognised control agents of today's Public Administration. He has his own characteristics that make him the most accessible, speedy, low cost and efficient instrument of safeguard against illegal, irregular or arbitrary administrative action. A thorough study of the Ombudsmen of two major provinces, Ontario and Québec, is more than interesting and makes one wonder why the 1978 federal project was abandonned. In a broad perpective, that includes a cost-benefit analysis, a comparison between the Ombudsman and the system of administrative appeal or review tribunals allows us to characterize each's specific role and evaluate the need they are respectively intended to fill.


2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 593-614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harald Winkler ◽  
Randall Spalding-Fecher ◽  
Lwazikazi Tyani ◽  
Khorommbi Matibe

Author(s):  
Sudhanshu S. Kamat ◽  
Dilip D. Sarode

Solar desalination technologies are becoming popular among the scientific community for the production of fresh water from the brackish water. Membrane technologies are expensive to be implemented on small scale. Solar stills have simple working principle and there is low cost associated with it. Varied configurations and modifications have been implemented to improve the performance of solar stills. Thermodynamic analysis has also been done for the same. However, it is important to also optimize various combinations of the operating parameters, including the cost-benefit analysis associated with it. This paper focuses on the review of the effects of various geometric and operating parameters, and also optimizing the thermodynamics to improve the performance of solar still.


Author(s):  
Enlie Wang ◽  
Barrett Caldwell

In this study, two different usability-testing methods (Heuristic Evaluation and User Testing) were selected to test the usability of a pre-release version of software searching for Science, Mathematics and Engineering education materials. Our major goal is to compare Heuristic Evaluation and User Testing in terms of efficiency, effectiveness and cost/benefit analysis. We found that Heuristic Evaluation was more efficient than User Testing in finding usability problems (41 vs. 10), while User Testing was more effective than Heuristic Evaluation in finding major problems (70% vs.12%). in general, Heuristic Evaluation appears to be more economic in finding a wide range of usability problems by incurring a low cost in comparison to User Testing. However, User Testing can provide more insightful data from real users such as user's performance and satisfaction.


2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (11) ◽  
pp. 2461-2472 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Salbego ◽  
M. Floris ◽  
E. Busnardo ◽  
M. Toaldo ◽  
R. Genevois

Abstract. The main aim of this paper is to test economic benefits of landslide prevention measures vs. post-event emergency actions. To this end, detailed- and large-scale analyses were performed in a training area located in the northeastern Italian pre-Alps that was hit by an exceptional rainfall event occurred in November 2010. On the detailed scale, a landslide reactivated after 2010 event was investigated. Numerical modeling demonstrated that remedial works carried out after the landslide – water-removal intervention such as a drainage trench – could have improved slope stability if applied before its occurrence. Then, a cost/benefit analysis was employed. It defined that prevention would have been economically convenient compared to a non-preventive and passive attitude, allowing a 30 % saving relative to total costs. On the large scale, one of the most affected areas after 2010 event was considered. A susceptibility analysis was performed using a simple probabilistic model, which allowed to highlight the main landslide conditioning factors and the most hazardous and vulnerable sectors. In particular, such low-cost analysis demonstrated that almost 50 % of landslides occurred after 2010 event could be foreseen and allowed to roughly quantify benefits from regional landslide prevention. However, a large-scale approach is insufficient to carry out a quantitative cost/benefit analysis, for which a detailed case-by-case risk assessment is needed. The here proposed approaches could be used as a means of preventive soil protection in not only the investigated case study but also all those hazardous areas where preventive measures are needed.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Johanna J. Hammes ◽  
Lena Nerhagen ◽  
Heather C. Fors

Abstract A commonly assumed reason for the delegation of authority from a legislature (politicians) to bureaucracies is that the bureaucrats have an information advantage over the politicians, including knowledge of cost–benefit analysis (CBA). But it is reasonable to assume that the bureaucrats use their information advantage by taking all relevant aspects of policy into account? We model the use of CBA using a delegation model and then test the theoretical predictions with empirical data collected from five Swedish government agencies. The empirical results lend support both for the hypothesis that risk aversion concerning the environmental outcome, the bureaucrats’ environmental attitudes, and the cost of taking CBA information into account have a considerable impact on the probability of using information from a CBA. Hence risk averse and bureaucrats with strong environmental preferences are less likely and bureaucrats with low cost of doing a CBA more likely than other bureaucrats to use CBA information. Finally, a binding governmental budget constraint may positively influence a bureaucrat’s choice of using CBA information. A tentative conclusion is therefore that it may be possible to increase the use of CBA by making the budgetary consequences of policies much clearer and demanding due consideration of costs.


2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 90-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie Beach ◽  
Ian Goodall ◽  
Paul Miller

Low-cost telemedicine equipment consisting of ISDN videoconferencing units and a store-and-forward system was installed in two minor injuries units (MIUs) and a hospital accident and emergency department in Lincolnshire. Over six months, 45 patients were treated using telemedicine in one MIU and 26 in another. Anecdotally, there were no reported radiograph discrepancies or missed diagnoses. Data collected during teleconsultations by both referring and consulting clinicians suggested that in some cases teleconsultation had helped to avoid transfer or onward referral. There were some changes in diagnosis and treatment after using telemedicine, indicating some decision-making value for the remote practitioners. In the context of minor injuries telemedicine, videoconferencing in realtime may prove to be more valuable than store-and-forward interactions. A cost–benefit analysis is being conducted using a pragmatic prospective case-control study.


2021 ◽  
pp. 003288552110104
Author(s):  
Barbara J. Cooke ◽  
Leslie B. Hill ◽  
David P. Farrington ◽  
William D. Bales

Dog-training programs have become a popular form of alternative prison programming. One of the reported benefits of these programs is their low cost to the criminal justice system. Very little research has been conducted on their effects on offenders, and, to date, no cost-benefit analyses have been reported. This article presents a cost-benefit analysis using program cost and updated recidivism results from an evaluation of dog-training programs. The analyses projected that, for every criminal justice system dollar spent on the dog-training programs, between $2,877 and $5,353 were saved. These findings suggest that dog-training programs could be cost-beneficial.


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