315 research outputs found
Social issues and implications of remote sensing applications: Paradigms of technology transfer
The transfer of technology from one federal agency to another was observed in the case of the move of LANDSAT to NOAA. An array of unanticipated consequences was found that have important impacts on both the process and outcome of the transfer. When the process was studied from viewpoint of the ultimate recipient, a set of expectations and perceptions were found that figure more in a final assessment than do the attributes of the technology being transfered. The question of how to link a technology with a community of potential users was studed in detail
A critique on the application of systems analysis to social problems
Systems analysis related to technology utilization and spinoff from aerospace researc
Technology and morals, an old story
Moral responsibilities of modern society in controlling technological progres
Systems analysis as a technique for solving social problems - A realistic overview
Critical evaluation of systems analysis techniques for solving social problem
Information systems and public planning
Information systems and public planning, social factor
Systems analysis and the technical writer's growing responsibility
Application of systems analysis to social factors by technical writer
A critical review of systems analysis - The California experience
Critique of California feasibility study on use of systems analysis techniques in socio-economic problem
CP-nets: A Tool for Representing and Reasoning withConditional Ceteris Paribus Preference Statements
Information about user preferences plays a key role in automated decision
making. In many domains it is desirable to assess such preferences in a
qualitative rather than quantitative way. In this paper, we propose a
qualitative graphical representation of preferences that reflects conditional
dependence and independence of preference statements under a ceteris paribus
(all else being equal) interpretation. Such a representation is often compact
and arguably quite natural in many circumstances. We provide a formal semantics
for this model, and describe how the structure of the network can be exploited
in several inference tasks, such as determining whether one outcome dominates
(is preferred to) another, ordering a set outcomes according to the preference
relation, and constructing the best outcome subject to available evidence
An integrated study of earth resources in the state of California using remote sensing techniques
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
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