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1 behavior strategy
Экономика: стратегия поведения -
2 behavior strategy
Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > behavior strategy
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3 strategy
стратегия, линия поведения- evaluation strategy -
4 strategy
1) стратегия, политика; поведение, линия поведения; образ действия2) т. игр стратегия -
5 strategy of behavior
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > strategy of behavior
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6 strategy of behavior
Математика: стратегия поведения -
7 strategy of behavior
мат.English-Russian scientific dictionary > strategy of behavior
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8 поведение
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9 стратегия поведения
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > стратегия поведения
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10 police
1) поліція, поліцейські; охорона порядку, підтримання порядку2) нести поліцейську службу, охороняти порядок, підтримувати порядок; забезпечувати поліцейською охороною•- police accountability
- police action
- police activities
- police activity
- police administration
- police administrator
- police agency
- police agent
- police anatagonizer
- police authority
- police ban
- police beating
- police behavior
- police behaviour
- police bias
- police blotter
- police board
- police box
- police bribery
- police brutality
- police calls from the public
- police car
- police cell
- police certificate
- police character
- police check
- police chief
- police college
- police commissioner
- police communication center
- police communication centre
- police communications room
- police complaints commission
- police composite
- police conduct
- police constable
- police control center
- police control centre
- police cordon
- police corruption
- police court
- police court case
- police cruiser
- police custody
- police department
- police decision-making
- police detection
- police detective
- police discretion
- police district
- police dog
- police duties
- police effectiveness
- police efficiency
- police employee
- police enforcement
- police entity
- police establishment
- police evidence
- police excess
- police executive
- police file
- police force
- police form
- police function
- police government
- police graft
- police headquarter
- police headquarters
- police identification
- police information
- police informer
- police inquiry
- police inspector
- police intake
- police interrogation
- police intrusion
- police investigation
- police investigation officer
- police killing
- police lineup
- police magistrate
- police malpractice
- police misconduct
- police offence
- police offense
- police office
- police officer
- police on horseback
- police operation
- police organization
- police patrol
- police permission
- police-population relations
- police position
- police post
- police power
- police powers
- police practice
- police practices
- police precinct
- police presence
- police prevention
- police probationer
- police procedure
- police proceeding
- police proceedings
- police protection
- police questioning
- police raid
- police ranks
- police rate
- police record
- police records
- police recruit
- police regulation
- police regulations
- police regulations offence
- police regulations offense
- police regulations wrong
- police report
- police researcher
- police resources
- police response time
- police retrieval
- police review board
- police rights
- police role
- police science
- police sergeant
- police servant
- police service
- police services
- police shooting
- police spy
- police standards
- police state
- police state's spending
- police statement
- police station
- police strategy
- police structure
- police superintendent
- police supervision
- police surveillance
- police-suspect encounter
- police system
- police tactics
- police team work
- police technology
- police terror
- police the seas
- police time
- police time to patrol
- police unit
- police use of force
- police violence
- police wagon
- police weapon
- police wiretapping
- police witness
- police work -
11 sheep
sheep GEN, STOCK Herdenmensch m (an investor without a focused trading strategy who trades on emotion and the suggestions of others, including friends, family and financial gurus, i.e. relying on a shepherd for guidance; the behavior contrasts with that of bulls and bears, who have focused views about the market; like a sheep, this type of investor is a follower, cf follow the pack) -
12 bargaining
1. n эк. ведение переговоров2. n эк. заключение сделки3. n эк. торгиСинонимический ряд:1. barter (noun) barter; business; negotiation; traffic; transaction2. contracting (verb) contracting; covenanting3. haggling (verb) chaffering; dickering; haggling; paltering4. trading (verb) bartering; exchanging; swapping; trading; trafficking; trucking -
13 monopoly
1. n монополия; исключительное право2. n монополистическое объединение, монополияСинонимический ряд:1. control (noun) control; corner; dominance; edge; manipulation; strategy2. exclusive possession (noun) bloc; cartel; combine; consortium; copyright; exclusive possession; merger; ownership; pool; syndicate; trust -
14 arbitrage pricing theory
Fina model of financial instrument and portfolio behavior that provides a benchmark of return and risk for capital budgeting and securities analysis. It can be used to create portfolios that track a market index, estimate the risk of an asset allocation strategy, or estimate the response of a portfolio to economic developments. -
15 business ethics
Gen Mgta system of moral principles applied in the commercial world. Business ethics provide guidelines for acceptable behavior by organizations in both their strategy formulation and day-to-day operations. An ethical approach is becoming necessary both for corporate success and a positive corporate image. Following pressure from consumers for more ethical and responsible business practices, many organizations are choosing to make a public commitment to ethical business by formulating codes of conduct and operating principles. In doing so, they must translate into action the concepts of personal and corporate accountability, corporate giving, corporate governance, and whistleblowing. -
16 bargaining
заключающий сделку; торговля -
17 Memory
To what extent can we lump together what goes on when you try to recall: (1) your name; (2) how you kick a football; and (3) the present location of your car keys? If we use introspective evidence as a guide, the first seems an immediate automatic response. The second may require constructive internal replay prior to our being able to produce a verbal description. The third... quite likely involves complex operational responses under the control of some general strategy system. Is any unitary search process, with a single set of characteristics and inputoutput relations, likely to cover all these cases? (Reitman, 1970, p. 485)[Semantic memory] Is a mental thesaurus, organized knowledge a person possesses about words and other verbal symbols, their meanings and referents, about relations among them, and about rules, formulas, and algorithms for the manipulation of these symbols, concepts, and relations. Semantic memory does not register perceptible properties of inputs, but rather cognitive referents of input signals. (Tulving, 1972, p. 386)The mnemonic code, far from being fixed and unchangeable, is structured and restructured along with general development. Such a restructuring of the code takes place in close dependence on the schemes of intelligence. The clearest indication of this is the observation of different types of memory organisation in accordance with the age level of a child so that a longer interval of retention without any new presentation, far from causing a deterioration of memory, may actually improve it. (Piaget & Inhelder, 1973, p. 36)4) The Logic of Some Memory Theorization Is of Dubious Worth in the History of PsychologyIf a cue was effective in memory retrieval, then one could infer it was encoded; if a cue was not effective, then it was not encoded. The logic of this theorization is "heads I win, tails you lose" and is of dubious worth in the history of psychology. We might ask how long scientists will puzzle over questions with no answers. (Solso, 1974, p. 28)We have iconic, echoic, active, working, acoustic, articulatory, primary, secondary, episodic, semantic, short-term, intermediate-term, and longterm memories, and these memories contain tags, traces, images, attributes, markers, concepts, cognitive maps, natural-language mediators, kernel sentences, relational rules, nodes, associations, propositions, higher-order memory units, and features. (Eysenck, 1977, p. 4)The problem with the memory metaphor is that storage and retrieval of traces only deals [ sic] with old, previously articulated information. Memory traces can perhaps provide a basis for dealing with the "sameness" of the present experience with previous experiences, but the memory metaphor has no mechanisms for dealing with novel information. (Bransford, McCarrell, Franks & Nitsch, 1977, p. 434)7) The Results of a Hundred Years of the Psychological Study of Memory Are Somewhat DiscouragingThe results of a hundred years of the psychological study of memory are somewhat discouraging. We have established firm empirical generalisations, but most of them are so obvious that every ten-year-old knows them anyway. We have made discoveries, but they are only marginally about memory; in many cases we don't know what to do with them, and wear them out with endless experimental variations. We have an intellectually impressive group of theories, but history offers little confidence that they will provide any meaningful insight into natural behavior. (Neisser, 1978, pp. 12-13)A schema, then is a data structure for representing the generic concepts stored in memory. There are schemata representing our knowledge about all concepts; those underlying objects, situations, events, sequences of events, actions and sequences of actions. A schema contains, as part of its specification, the network of interrelations that is believed to normally hold among the constituents of the concept in question. A schema theory embodies a prototype theory of meaning. That is, inasmuch as a schema underlying a concept stored in memory corresponds to the mean ing of that concept, meanings are encoded in terms of the typical or normal situations or events that instantiate that concept. (Rumelhart, 1980, p. 34)Memory appears to be constrained by a structure, a "syntax," perhaps at quite a low level, but it is free to be variable, deviant, even erratic at a higher level....Like the information system of language, memory can be explained in part by the abstract rules which underlie it, but only in part. The rules provide a basic competence, but they do not fully determine performance. (Campbell, 1982, pp. 228, 229)When people think about the mind, they often liken it to a physical space, with memories and ideas as objects contained within that space. Thus, we speak of ideas being in the dark corners or dim recesses of our minds, and of holding ideas in mind. Ideas may be in the front or back of our minds, or they may be difficult to grasp. With respect to the processes involved in memory, we talk about storing memories, of searching or looking for lost memories, and sometimes of finding them. An examination of common parlance, therefore, suggests that there is general adherence to what might be called the spatial metaphor. The basic assumptions of this metaphor are that memories are treated as objects stored in specific locations within the mind, and the retrieval process involves a search through the mind in order to find specific memories....However, while the spatial metaphor has shown extraordinary longevity, there have been some interesting changes over time in the precise form of analogy used. In particular, technological advances have influenced theoretical conceptualisations.... The original Greek analogies were based on wax tablets and aviaries; these were superseded by analogies involving switchboards, gramophones, tape recorders, libraries, conveyor belts, and underground maps. Most recently, the workings of human memory have been compared to computer functioning... and it has been suggested that the various memory stores found in computers have their counterparts in the human memory system. (Eysenck, 1984, pp. 79-80)Primary memory [as proposed by William James] relates to information that remains in consciousness after it has been perceived, and thus forms part of the psychological present, whereas secondary memory contains information about events that have left consciousness, and are therefore part of the psychological past. (Eysenck, 1984, p. 86)Once psychologists began to study long-term memory per se, they realized it may be divided into two main categories.... Semantic memories have to do with our general knowledge about the working of the world. We know what cars do, what stoves do, what the laws of gravity are, and so on. Episodic memories are largely events that took place at a time and place in our personal history. Remembering specific events about our own actions, about our family, and about our individual past falls into this category. With amnesia or in aging, what dims... is our personal episodic memories, save for those that are especially dear or painful to us. Our knowledge of how the world works remains pretty much intact. (Gazzaniga, 1988, p. 42)The nature of memory... provides a natural starting point for an analysis of thinking. Memory is the repository of many of the beliefs and representations that enter into thinking, and the retrievability of these representations can limit the quality of our thought. (Smith, 1990, p. 1)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Memory
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