2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.eiar.2020.106500
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Just so that we don't miss it: A critical view on the meaning of decision in IA

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…For instance, in the offshore wind farm installation case study there are three criteria with two options (AC1, AC2, AC4) and four criteria with three options (AC3, AC5, AC6, AC7). Processing the full problem with COMET will lead to N = 3 4 • 2 3 = 648 characteristic objects, requiring ½N(N−1) = 209,628 pairwise comparisons. Above and beyond that fact that so many comparisons are exhausting for the expert panel, the human brain cannot make inferences with more than 3-4 items stored in the working memory.…”
Section: Fuzzy Logic and Criteria Clusteringmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For instance, in the offshore wind farm installation case study there are three criteria with two options (AC1, AC2, AC4) and four criteria with three options (AC3, AC5, AC6, AC7). Processing the full problem with COMET will lead to N = 3 4 • 2 3 = 648 characteristic objects, requiring ½N(N−1) = 209,628 pairwise comparisons. Above and beyond that fact that so many comparisons are exhausting for the expert panel, the human brain cannot make inferences with more than 3-4 items stored in the working memory.…”
Section: Fuzzy Logic and Criteria Clusteringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A separate score is computed for each of the three sub-problems and a final composite score is produced as the product of the scores every alternative receives from each sub-problem. This modified COMET approach leads to 3 4 + 2 3 = 89 characteristic objects and a total set of 324 + 28 = 352 pairwise comparisons. (Admittedly, these savings are achieved by not solving the complete problem and hence immunity to RR is no longer guaranteed.…”
Section: Fuzzy Logic and Criteria Clusteringmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The conceptual development draws upon i.) existing theories on a practitioner's ability to influence the EA practice they conduct Lyhne et al, 2021) and ii.). understandings of general decision-making processes Christensen and Jensen, 1986;March, 1994).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…identify an EA practitioner's decision-making process as choices on i.e., determining the scope of relevant impacts, their significance, the executed quality of the EA, in which discretion can be exercised at any point in the process. recognize that decision-making within EA practice consists of formal and informal decision-making processes, which means that elements of EA practice are both subject to impartial procedures (i.e., through legislation) and predisposed to the interpretive values of the practitioner Lyhne et al, 2021). Thus, an EA process previously believed to be objectively conducted, is now also characterized by subjective social and political contextual factors.…”
Section: Discretionary Freedommentioning
confidence: 99%