Tentative guidelines to help choosing an appropriate MCDA method
Article Abstract:
Seven tentative guidelines were proposed to select an appropriate multicriterion decision aid (MCDA) method. The first tentative guideline proposed involves identification of decision process' stakeholders. The second guideline calls for consideration of the decision making (DM) cognition in selecting a specific preference elucidation node. The third guideline involves identification of the decision problematic pursued by the DM.
Publication Name: European Journal of Operational Research
Subject: Business, international
ISSN: 0377-2217
Year: 1998
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Supporting the intelligent MCDA user: a case study in multi-person multi-criteria decision support
Article Abstract:
Two research studies are done to provide intelligent user support for multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) and decision support to small and medium enterprises in the Glasgow area . The use of software in the context of study to explore potential futures is described.
Publication Name: European Journal of Operational Research
Subject: Business, international
ISSN: 0377-2217
Year: 2005
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Stability analysis of tree structured decision functions
Article Abstract:
A study on the use of tree structures in stability analysis for multiple criteria decision making problems is proposed.
Publication Name: European Journal of Operational Research
Subject: Business, international
ISSN: 0377-2217
Year: 2005
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Reflective planning theorising and professional protectionism. Second homes: A new framework for policy
- Abstracts: Strategic variables that influence entry mode choice in service firms. International Market Entry: Does the Home Country Affect Entry-Mode Decisions?
- Abstracts: Constrained optimization involving expensive function evaluations: a sequential approach. On nondifferentiable fractional minimax programming