Academic literature on the topic 'Use value'

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Journal articles on the topic "Use value"

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VINA R, BHOJWANI, and THAKKAR MANOJ K. "Study of Shareholder Value Creation and Measurement with use "Value based Management " Method (Vbm)." Indian Journal of Applied Research 4, no. 6 (October 1, 2011): 273–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.15373/2249555x/june2014/87.

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Jung, Seokjin, Changjun Kim, Hyangju Lee, and Wonhyeon Lim. "A Study on How to Use CHILDREN'S PARKS according to the Change in Population Composition." J-Institute 6, no. 2 (June 30, 2021): 11–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.22471/value.2021.6.2.11.

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Charpentier, P. "Use values: The value added for citizen inclusion." Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine 58 (September 2015): e53-e54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rehab.2015.07.132.

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Stern, David I. "Use value, exchange value, and resource scarcity." Energy Policy 27, no. 8 (August 1999): 469–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0301-4215(99)00043-9.

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Petrova, A. A., T. I. Smirnova, M. N. Pavlov, and I. A. Drozdov. "THE INCREASE IN NUTRITIVE VALUE OF POTATO WHEN USING THE BORON CHELATE." Успехи современного естествознания (Advances in Current Natural Sciences), no. 10 2019 (2019): 13–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.17513/use.37207.

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Bergstrom, John C., and John R. Stoll. "Value Estimator Models for Wetlands-Based Recreational Use Values." Land Economics 69, no. 2 (May 1993): 132. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3146513.

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Stampacchia, Paolo, Marco Tregua, and Mariarosaria Coppola. "Zooming-in value-in-use through basic individual values." Journal of Customer Behaviour 19, no. 2 (August 31, 2020): 97–125. http://dx.doi.org/10.1362/147539220x15929906305116.

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To overcome the vagueness that Service-Dominant Logic (SDL) scholars have found in conceptualisations of value-in-use due to the existence of different denominations and perspectives, this conceptual paper analyses the SDL literature, finding both value-in-use proposed as a comprehensive denomination, and resources, institutions, and time proposed as its main elements.<br/> Focusing on individuals as beneficiaries of value-in-use, the paper infuses the theory of basic individual values from social psychology in SDL, leading to three propositions that stress the ways in which basic individual values affect individuals' perceptions of resources, institutions, and time. Therefore, basic individual values act as lenses through which beneficiaries perceive flows of resources, institutions, and the time during which use occurs, thereby clarifying why value-in-use is always uniquely and phenomenologically determined by the beneficiary.<br/> This conceptual paper proposes basic individual values as micro-foundations of value co-creation, reveals ways to define the perceived value of resources, and leads practitioners to set value propositions according to basic individual values.
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Mausethagen, Sølvi, Tine S. Prøitz, and Guri Skedsmo. "Redefining public values: data use and value dilemmas in education." Education Inquiry 12, no. 1 (March 2, 2020): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2020.1733744.

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Okrut, S. V., T. G. Zelenskaya, E. E. Stepanenko, Yu A. Bezgina, and A. S. Shkirya. "ESTIMATION OF THE FLORISTIC COMPOSITION OF THE STATE NATURAL RESERVE OF LAND VALUE «BESHTAUGORSKY», STAVROPOL REGION." Успехи современного естествознания (Advances in Current Natural Sciences), no. 12 2021 (2021): 179–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.17513/use.37756.

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Kader, Parahoo. "Questionnaires: Use, value and limitations." Nurse Researcher 1, no. 2 (January 1994): 4–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.7748/nr.1.2.4.s2.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Use value"

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Kalitaev, O. "Use and exchange value." Thesis, Видавництво СумДУ, 2006. http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/21775.

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Popesku, Mihajlo. "Clarifying value in use and value creation process." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2015. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28558/.

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Current marketing literature, regardless of its underlying paradigm/logic, lacks consensus on how to conceptualise value creation, how to define what it entails, along with by whom, how, where and when it is created (Voima et al., 2010). It is no surprise then that the value creation process is often described as a ‘black box’ (Grönroos, 2011b; Leroy et al., 2013). In this doctoral research the customer’s perspective on value creation has been advocated. Research was conducted using mixed methods in the context of digital camera usage. It was found that value creation process consists of inputs (resources, customer and other socio-economic actors), 5 value creation phases (this is actually the content of black box: usage episode initiation, resource selection, resource adjustment, resource integration and evaluation) and outputs (side effects and value-in-use as a mix of instrumental benefits, experiential benefits, symbolic benefits and sacrifices;). Simultaneously to value creation, each consumption episode provides an opportunity for customer’s episodic learning that can result in customer’s augmented or new knowledge, skills and experience. Research found value to be episodic phenomenon, while value creation consistent with Roggeveen et al. (2012), was found to be cyclical and non-linear, showing how unpredictable the unique value creation path of an individual customer can be. This indicates that a value creation episode can evolve in unique ways depending on the sequence of value creation phases, given that customers may revisit already visited value creation phases (unless resources are not destroyed). In this way, while the study acknowledges the idiosyncrasies of individual customers’ approaches, on the other hand, it provides a theoretically structured view of this inherently idiosyncratic process.
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Wan, Sabri W. M. "Forest recreation use patterns, user behaviour and recreational value in Malaysia." Thesis, Bangor University, 1987. https://research.bangor.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/forest-recreation-use-patterns-user-behaviour-and-recreational-value-in-malaysia(2695dbd3-a060-47e9-9ed6-714937abada7).html.

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The study is concerned with an examination of outdoor recreation at three forest recreation areas situated within and at the periphery of a large and major population region in Peninsular Malaysia. It was undertaken primarily to investigate the features that describe the use of these areas and to estimate the use-demand and quantification of consumers' surplus. Initially, a brief description of forest recreation in Peninsular Malaysia is presented. This is followed by a review of techniques for estimating consumers' surplus, after which it was concluded that an application of the travel cost method was appropriate for this study. An on-site questionnaire survey was used to gather a reasonable amount of user information. The questionnaire surveys carried out were found to be valuable; the information gathered facilitated the description and analysis of the areas' consumption, travel and use patterns and the behaviour of the users. Thus the surveys also provided information which was appropriate for the application of the travel cost technique. Subsequently, a detailed description of user behaviour is presented. Difficulties of the travel cost approach, were identified and addressed through the use of appropriate sample and extra-sample data. Particular attention was paid to the problems of multi-purpose trips, travel time bias and the influence of alternative sites on participation. Problems with functional forms and the weighting of points for the trip demand model were also given considerable attention. It is believed that the model selected in this study is an improvement on previously known models. The resulting estimates of consumers' surplus for the three areas are reasonably acceptable and conform to a priori expectations. Finally, the main conclusions of the thesis are highlighted and some aspects that have a bearing on planning and management issues are discussed along with brief recommendations for further and future research efforts.
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Said, Emanuel. "The value of market research information : how do clients of market research services construct value from their usage of market research information?" Thesis, Cranfield University, 2011. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/7096.

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A significant global industry, the provision of market research is a business to business service where market research organizations provide market research information to customers, who in turn, need to make informed decisions about marketing strategy alternatives. This study involves a systematic literature review of the influences impacting on the use of market research information. It expounds the conditions, factors and mechanisms that induce or hinder the process of use among client organization users. In so doing, this investigation provides a descriptive assessment of the body of knowledge from which this study draws. This study proposes a theoretical framework of the reported conditions, factors and mechanisms that enhance or hinder the process at different stages of usage of market research. Influences like (user) organization’s strategy, structure, market philosophy, stance in the market and access to market research suppliers have a direct effect on how user organizations seek and apply market research information. The process of usage features seven phases, contrasting against the four or five phases that are typically reported in literature. Application of market research information in marketing decisions may follow one of three possible types of application: instrumental, conceptual and symbolic. This study also explores the various limitations in our understanding of this phenomenon. Relying on a number of published positivist contributions, our understanding of this process is composed of narrow views of specific causalities, each investigated independently from the rest. These result in an incomplete, inconsistent picture about a phenomenon. For instance, influences impacting on transformation and dissemination steps remain largely unknown, as are the factors impacting on application of market research information like symbolic use. Equally, published positivist researchoften relies on a single informant approach that is assumed to represent the reality of an entire organization. The study concludes with considerations about future work that may form part of my PhD research, intended to address a selection of gaps in the existing body of knowledge about this phenomenon.
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Taylor, Calvin Francis. "The role of the value-form in the labour theory of value." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 1991. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/3503/.

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It is repeatedly claimed that the labour theory of value is fatally flawed. Whether as a result of this claim, or as is more likely a change in the intellectual atmosphere, there has in recent years been little debate of the merits and weaknesses of the labour theory of value. The principal objective of this thesis is to re-examine a number of the flaws more widely debated in an earlier period and to show that the claim that the labour theory of value is flawed is false. The thesis claims that the work of Marx represents thus far the single most important contribution to the development of the labour theory of value. This contribution is contrasted with that of the Classical political economists, most notably Adam Smith and David Ricardo. An examination is made of the works of Smith and Ricardo which demonstrates that the flaws within their labour theory of value are attributable to the shortcomings of their wider theoretical endeavours. In particular, they fail to identify the nature of value-creating labour; examine the role of the value-form and explain cogently the quantitative determination of value. Marx's work is then examined with each of these points as a pivot of reference. The thesis concludes by drawing the three strands of analysis together to demonstrate that, against a history of criticism, Marx's theory presents a structured coherent whole, largely immune to the criticisms made of it, both from without and within the Marxist tradition of political economy.
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Burlingame, Carol Elaine. "Assessing current agriculture use value in farmland preservation." Ohio : Ohio University, 2004. http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?ohiou1089818218.

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Simões, Paula Marisa Nunes. "The recreational use value of a national forest." Doctoral thesis, FEUC, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10316/23334.

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Tese de doutoramento em Economia, apresentada á Faculdade de Economia da Universidade de Coimbra , sob a orientação de Luís Cruz e Eduardo Barata.
National forests and woodlands are some of the environmental public resources that provide a diversity of goods and services to society. Supporting, regulating, provisioning and cultural services are all known to contribute to human well-being. As these services are not traded in regular markets because of the public or semi-public characteristics of the resources involved, their values are largely unknown. However, a deeper knowledge of the related benefits’ value is expected to help to enhance management practices. The research described in this dissertation concentrates on the analysis of the benefits related to recreational activities enjoyed in national forests and in understanding the demand for these environmental services. The research was motivated by the perception that these values are largely unknown, particularly in Portugal. Bussaco National Forest was chosen as the case study area, but the conclusions are likely to be adapted and extended to other national forests. Two non-market valuation techniques, the travel cost method and the contingent behaviour method, are used to estimate the recreational use benefits. The travel cost method, which belongs to the group of revealed preferences techniques, is used to analyse the actual behaviour and enables us to estimate recreational use values in current conditions. The individual version of the method is identified as the most accurate in the present context as we analyse the recreational demand of a forest visited by people living at different distances from it. From the management perspective, it is also important to address how people would behave if new hypothetical conditions were to be observed. It is particularly important to predict the effects on demand resulting from changes in forest access costs and from the deterioration of current conservation conditions due to a forest fire. The contingent behaviour method, which belongs to the group of stated preferences techniques, is applied jointly with the travel cost method to assess the effects of these changes. Count data models corrected for endogenous stratification and ordered models are used in the analysis of the actual visit behaviour. Travel cost, substitute cost, income per capita, visit motivations, on-site time and visit distribution during the year were identified as the main explanatory variables of demand. Price and income elasticity of demand computed using count data models are low. This result is supported by the ordered models, as results show that the change in income/price must be quite significant to modify demand levels. Considering only the current users, the forest recreational use value estimated for the past three years is about €106 700. A count data model and a pseudo-panel specification is used to combine contingent and observed travel behaviour. The analysis reveals that visitors are sensitive to price and quality changes and that in the forest fire scenario the intended number of trips would be seriously reduced, thus imposing an important welfare loss. There are evidences of hypothetical bias in answers to future behaviour if current conditions do not change and signals of strategic bias when changes in management options are in view. There are no signals of these biases when the quality changes are exogenous.
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Burlingame, Carol E. "Assessing Current Agriculture Use Value in Farmland Preservation." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2004. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1089818218.

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Häggquist, Elisabeth. "The Economic Value and Use of Geological Information." Doctoral thesis, Luleå tekniska universitet, Samhällsvetenskap, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-65731.

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The overall purpose of this thesis is to investigate the economic value and use of geological information. Earthobservations of a geological nature, may have profound impacts on peoples everyday lives. Geological informationplays a key role in addressing the challenges of sustainable development, and contributes to improved decisionmakingprocesses related to, for instance, land degradation and water protection. Still, few have researched theeconomic values attached to such information. This thesis contains an introduction and five self-contained papers.Paper (I) provides a review of previous research addressing the economic value of geological information andother earth observations, as well as, related products, services and infrastructure. The paper also identifiesimportant lessons and topics that require increased attention in future research. The review of prior research showsthat significant economic benefits can be attached to the use of geological information. Still, it is often difficult tocompare results across studies since they differ in scope and make alternative assumptions concerning whichsectors to cover. Furthermore, previous research is not uniform in its treatment of potential (rather than onlyexisting) users, and it employs varying conceptions of avoided costs. The paper concludes that future researchshould devote more attention to the public and experience good characteristics of geological information and othertypes of earth observations, thus highlighting the preconditions for information adoption as well as addressing therole of potential users.Papers (II) and (III) investigate the determinants of adopting geological information in the public sector, with anemphasis on Swedish municipalities. Paper (II) contributes to the literature by providing theoretical explanationsand empirical findings on various individual and organizational factors influencing the adoption of geologicalinformation. The paper employs an information adoption model based on literature on diffusion of innovation. Itis estimated using data collected from 677 officials in all Swedish municipalities. The results indicate thatperceived usefulness and educational efforts have the largest influence on the adoption decision followed by agender effect. Furthermore, the results also show that organizational effects exist at the working unit level, butthere appear to be no spatial interactions across municipal boundaries.Paper (III) further investigates the adoption of geological information in the public sector by considering whetheranalyses of user patterns can be improved by considering an interrelated model estimation involving two types ofgeoinformation. The empirical tests focus on whether there are gender differences in how peer advice affects theuse of geoinformation. The information adoption model is estimated using probit and bivariate probits. Overall theresults indicate a more accurate prediction pattern when a secondary geoinformation decision was included, thussuggesting that different types of geoinformation should be analyzed jointly. The officials at Swedishmunicipalities tend to use both types of geoinformation, thus alluding to a demand for combined geoinformationproducts among the target population. Finally, there is evidence of women’s decisions to use geoinformation beingaffected by peer advice.Paper (IV) focuses on the economic value of hydrogeological information, namely water quality. The willingnessto pay (WTP) for reduced health risks following the exposure to emerging contaminants and microbial outbreaksin drinking water is assessed. Emerging contaminants, such as highly fluorinated substances (e..g., PFOA andPFOS), have been found in drinking water post treatment on a global level. The drinking water is the main sourceof exposure for humans. The WTP is assessed through a choice experiment approach, which also accounts fordifferences in perceptions between PFASs and microbial outbreaks due to parasites or bacteria. Knowledge aboutpublic preferences across different health threats is key to assessing support for policies aimed at reducing suchhealth risks. A majority of the respondents were found to have a higher WTP for reducing the risk of chemicalexposure to PFASs than reducing the corresponding risk of microbial outbreaks.In Paper (IV) it is evident that risk adverse individuals have a higher WTP for reducing health risks of drinkingwater, compared with individuals with other risk preferences. However, there is no consensus in the literature onhow to accurately capture risk preferences beyond financial decisions. Paper (V) therefore discusses thetheoretical assumptions used when measuring risk preferences and whether it is necessary to address domain riskspecific preferences. In order to test if a general risk preference is enough we present a hypothetical experimenton risk preferences for the health and financial domains, respectively. We also consider the design of theexperiment and compare the format with a reduced form to control for potential framing effects. The riskpreferences were elicited using switch multiple price list lotteries with hypothetical payments, and the questionswere adapted to the health domain by framing the lotteries as improvements in current health status using a visualanalogue scale as the reference point. The results show that individual risk preferences tend to be relativelyinconsistent across the two studied domains, and that the respondents appear to be more risk averse in the healthdomain than in the financial. The majority of the respondents tend to give too much weight to low-probabilityevents, which is consistent with cumulative prospect theory.
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Nebe, Stephan. "Value-based decision making and alcohol use disorder." Doctoral thesis, Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2018. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-233855.

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Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a widespread mental disease denoted by chronic alcohol use despite significant negative consequences for a person’s life. It affected more than 14 million persons in Europe alone and accounted for more than 5% of deaths worldwide in 2011-2012. Understanding the psychological and neurobiological mechanisms driving the development and maintenance of pathological alcohol use is key to conceptualizing new programs for prevention and therapy of AUD. There has been a variety of etiological models trying to describe and relate these mechanisms. Lately, the view of AUD as a disorder of learning and decision making has received much support proposing dual systems to be at work in AUD – one system being deliberate, forward-planning, and goal-directed and the other one reflexive, automatic, and habitual. Both systems supposedly work in parallel in a framework of value-based decision making and their balance can be flexibly adjusted in healthy agents, while a progressive imbalance favoring habitual over goal-directed choice strategies is assumed in AUD. This imbalance has been theoretically associated to neural adaptations to chronic alcohol use in corticostriatal pathways involved in reward processing, especially in ventral striatum. However, these theoretical models are grounded strongly on animal research while empirical research in the human domain remains rather sparse and inconclusive. Furthermore, alterations in value-based decision-making processes and their neural implementation might not only result from prolonged alcohol misuse but may also represent premorbid interindividual differences posing a risk factor for the development of AUD. Therefore, I here present three studies investigating the relation of alcohol use with the balance between goal-directed and habitual decision systems and with parameters modulating option valuation processes of these systems, namely delay, risk, and valence of option outcomes. To separate the investigation of these decision processes as predisposing risk for or consequence of alcohol use, two samples were examined: one sample of 201 eighteen-year-old men being neither abstinent from nor dependent on alcohol as well as one sample of 114 AUD patients in detoxification treatment and 98 control participants matched for age, sex, educational background, and smoking status. Both samples had a baseline assessment of several behavioral tasks, questionnaires, and neuropsychological testing and were followed-up over one year to examine drinking trajectories in the sample of young men and relapse in detoxified patients. The behavioral tasks included a sequential choice task using model-free and model-based reinforcement learning as operationalization of habitual and goal-directed decision making, respectively, during functional magnetic resonance imaging and four tasks probing participants’ delay discounting, probability discounting for gains and losses, and loss aversion. Study 1 presents the cross-sectional analysis of the sequential choice task in relation to baseline drinking behavior of the young-adult sample. These analyses did not reveal an association between non-pathological alcohol use and habitual and goal-directed control on neither a behavioral nor neural level except for one exploratory finding of increased BOLD responses to model-free habitual learning signals in participants with earlier onset of drinking. Study 2 examined the same task in AUD patients compared to control participants showing no difference in behavioral control or neural correlates between those groups. However, prospectively relapsing AUD patients showed lower BOLD responses associated to model-based goal-directed control than abstaining patients and control participants. Additionally, the interaction of goal-directed control and positive expectancies of alcohol effects discriminated subsequently relapsing and abstaining patients revealing an increased risk of relapse for those patients who showed higher levels of goal-directed control and low alcohol expectancies or low levels of goal-directedness and high expectancies. Study 3 examined modulating features of goal-directed and habitual option valuation – delay, risk, and valence of options – in association to alcohol use in the young-adult sample and AUD status in the sample of patients and matched control participants on a cross-sectional as well as longitudinal level. This study revealed no relation of delay, risk, and loss aversion with current alcohol use and consumption one year later in the young men. In contrast, AUD patients showed systematically more impulsive choice behavior than control participants in all four tasks: a higher preference for immediate rewards, more risky choices when facing gains and less when facing losses, and lower loss aversion. Furthermore, a general tendency to overestimate the probability of uncertain losses could predict relapse risk over the following year in AUD patients. Taken together, these results do not support the hypothesis that mechanisms of value-based decision making might be predisposing risk factors for alcohol consumption. The findings for patients already suffering from AUD are mixed: while choice biases regarding delays, risks, and valence of option outcomes seem to be altered systematically in AUD, there was no indication of an imbalance of habitual and goal-directed control. These findings challenge the assumption of a generalized outcome-unspecific shift of behavioral control from goal-directed to habitual strategies during the development of AUD and point towards several possible future avenues of research to modify or extend the theoretical model.
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Books on the topic "Use value"

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Muzeʼon, ʻerekh shimush: Museum, use value. [Petaḥ-Tiḳṿah]: Muzeʼon Petaḥ-Tiḳvah le-omanut, 2014.

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Sendak, Paul E. Timber management and use-value assessment. Radnor, Pa: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, 1994.

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Office, General Accounting. Use of value engineering in defense acquisitions. Washington, D.C: United States General Accounting Office, 2003.

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Wisconsin. Legislature. Legislative Audit Bureau. Use value assessment of agricultural land: Letter report. Madison, Wis: State of Wisconsin, Legislative Audit Bureau, 2010.

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Muller, R. Andrew. The socioeconomic value of water in Canada. [Ottawa: Environment Canada], 1985.

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Barbera, Maria. Shareholder value demystified: An explanation of methodologies and use. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 1999.

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S, Ferrell Joseph. Carrying forward deferred taxes on land under use-value assessment. [Chapel Hill]: Institute of Government, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1986.

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Future, Resources for the, ed. The economic value of water. Washington, D.C: Resources for the Future, 1986.

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Linitz, Karen Storin. Survey on the value of user surveys. Buffalo, N.Y: W. S. Hein, 2011.

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Ingram, Gregory K., and Yu-hung Hong. Value capture and land policies. Cambridge, Mass: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Use value"

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Binns, Chelsea A. "Background, Use, and Value." In Fraud Hotlines, 1–10. New York : CRC Press, [2017]: Auerbach Publications, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315370361-1.

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Robison, Lindon J., and Steven R. Koenig. "Market Value Versus Agricultural Use Value of Farmland." In Costs and Returns for Agricultural Commodities, 207–28. New York: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429036385-25.

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Seeley, Ivor H. "Land Use and Value Determinants." In Building Economics, 380–402. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13757-2_14.

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McNeill, Desmond. "Consumption, Need and Use-Value." In Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought, 225–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56123-9_13.

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Hay, Alexander H. "Protecting value: ensuring continued use." In Planning Resilient Infrastructure Systems, 107–28. London: ICE Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1680/pris.65628.107.

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Aronoff, Craig E., and John L. Ward. "The Value of Good Advice." In How to Choose and Use Advisors, 1–10. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-51500-1_1.

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Prins, Herbert H. T., and Jan Geu Grootenhuis. "Introduction: The Value of Priceless Wildlife." In Wildlife Conservation by Sustainable Use, 1–12. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-4012-6_1.

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van Loon, Paul. "Riccati Transformations: When and How to Use?" In Numerical Boundary Value ODEs, 77–89. Boston, MA: Birkhäuser Boston, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-5160-6_4.

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Rapp, Donald. "Value of ISRU." In Use of Extraterrestrial Resources for Human Space Missions to Moon or Mars, 147–62. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72694-6_3.

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Ustundag, Alp, Aylin Ustundag, and Mert Bal. "Economic Potential of RFID Use in Apparel Retail Industry." In The Value of RFID, 129–39. London: Springer London, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-4345-1_10.

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Conference papers on the topic "Use value"

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Liu, Wei, Chenyu Liu, and Xiaohong Chen. "Research on the safety value and use value." In 2015 International conference on Engineering Management, Engineering Education and Information Technology. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emeeit-15.2015.18.

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Preshkin, German. "USE VALUE OF NEW KNOWLEDGE." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on POLITICAL SCIENCES, LAW, FINANCE, ECONOMICS AND TOURISM. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b23/s7.095.

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Morad, Mohamed, and Sameh M. El-Sayegh. "Use of Earned Value Management in the UAE Construction Industry." In 2016 International Conference on Industrial Engineering, Management Science and Application (ICIMSA). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icimsa.2016.7504044.

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Dong, Yukun, and Yalan Wang. "Fully Detection of Illegal Value Use Defects." In 2016 International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCoS). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2016.56.

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Kroll, Dan. "Getting Dual Use Value from Security Monitoring." In 12th Annual Conference on Water Distribution Systems Analysis (WDSA). Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/41203(425)36.

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Rahmawati, Yani, and Christiono Utomo. "Value-based decision for highest and best use." In 2017 International Conference on Engineering Technology and Technopreneurship (ICE2T). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ice2t.2017.8215982.

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Punnyasoma, J. A. G., H. S. Jayasena, and T. M. M. P. Tennakoon. "Use of bim solutions to facilitate value management." In 8th World Construction Symposium. University of Moratuwa, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31705/wcs.2019.59.

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BABAYEJU, O., E. Brentjens, L. Clegg, M. Idris, S. Oloniboko, D. Nwabor, I. Jumbo, and G. Santoso. "Innovative Use of Real Time Density Image in Well Placement." In Geosteering and Well Placement Workshop - Geosteering: Balancing Value and Risk. Netherlands: EAGE Publications BV, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.20144255.

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Cibecchini, Daniele, and Alberto Cavalli. "Increasing the value of Italian beech through structural use." In Secondo Congresso Internazionale di Selvicoltura = Second International Congress of Silviculture. Accademia Italiana di Scienze Forestali, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4129/2cis-dc-val.

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Palleske, Cortney, Katherine Kalenchuk, Colin Hume, and William Bawden. "Strategic use of geotechnical data for maximised value added." In Eighth International Conference on Deep and High Stress Mining. Australian Centre for Geomechanics, Perth, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.36487/acg_rep/1704_33_palleske.

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Reports on the topic "Use value"

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Sendak, Paul E., and Neil K. Huyler. Timber management and use-value assessment. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/ne-rp-691.

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Villa Zárate, Javier, Daniel Vieitez Martínez, Carlos Mondragón, Miguel Á. Martínez, and Jaime Pérez. Selection Criteria for PPP Projects: Determinants of Value Generation in the Use of Public Resources (Value for Money). Inter-American Development Bank, September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003615.

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The Discussion Papers PPP Americas 2021 are a series of documents written to prepare for PPP Americas tenth edition. The event is the most important forum on Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), organized every two years by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). Driven by PPP Americas 2021, we gathered eight thematic groups were, with specialists, professionals, consultants, and scholars engaged directly in the preparation, identification, structuration, and management of PPP infrastructure projects in countries of the region. IDB specialists coordinated the groups to review the main hot topics on PPP projects for social and economic infrastructure, aiming to exchange experiences, debate successful cases and lessons learned. The present Discussion Paper, “Selection Criteria for PPP Projects,” collects the main conclusions and recommendations discussed by the group and intends to consolidate a knowledge exchange environment in infrastructure and PPP inside the region, offering best practices on infrastructure projects selection and value generation in the use of public resources in Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Sendak, Paul E., Donald F. Dennis, and Donald F. Dennis. Vermont's use-value appraisal property tax program: a forest inventory and analysis. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experimental Station, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/ne-rp-627.

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Gómez-González, José Eduardo, Carlos Eduardo León-Rincón, and Karen Juliet Leiton-Rodríguez. Does the use of foreign currency derivatives affect colombian firms? market value? Bogotá, Colombia: Banco de la República, May 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.32468/be.562.

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Sendak, Paul E., Donald F. Dennis, and Donald F. Dennis. Vermont's use-value appraisal property tax program: a forest inventory and analysis. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experimental Station, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/ne-rp-627.

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Kyle, G. Page, Steven J. Smith, Leon E. Clarke, Son H. Kim, and Marshall A. Wise. The Value of End-Use Energy Efficiency in Mitigation of U.S. Carbon Emissions. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/926964.

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Annevelink, E., J. B. van Gogh, P. V. Bartels, J. Broeze, J. E. G. van Dam, J. J. Groot, N. J. J. P. Koenderink, et al. How to achieve resource use efficiency in integrated food and biobased value chains? Wageningen: Wageningen Food & Biobased Research, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.18174/407896.

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Frick, Natalie Mims, and Lisa C. Schwartz. Time-Sensitive Value of Efficiency: Use Cases in Electricity Sector Planning and Programs. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1574347.

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Villacis, Alexis, Victor Barrera, Jeffrey Alwang, Carlos Caicedo, and James Quiroz. Strategies to strengthen Ecuador's high-value cacao value chain. Inter-American Development Bank, January 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003960.

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Since the early nineteenth century, cacao has been an important export earner for Ecuador. Today the importance of this sector remains, as Ecuador is the main producer and exporter of Fine and Flavor cacao worldwide. Motivated by the main transformations of the global food systems and the increasing demand for multidimensional credence attributes, this study examines the present state of Ecuador's cacao industry, identifies areas of opportunity, and discusses how the private and public sectors can work together to meet existing and emerging challenges. Findings are supported by interviews conducted with the principal actors in the Ecuadorian cacao industry and two case studies. The first case study focuses on how associativity can help cacao farmers producing high-quality beans to differentiate themselves and succeed in modern agri-food markets. The second case study explores the success of a local chocolate firm and its links with local cacao farmers. Findings suggest that market trends have created new business opportunities for cacao producers and chocolate processors. These opportunities are most open to firms who can personalize and differentiate their products, for example, through the use of quality certifications such as organic, fair trade, reduced carbon load, etc. More importantly, market developments are driving exporters to enhance the performance of cacao value chains in the country, but the sector requires coordination to capture reputation and credence-based demands for the local cacao.
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Vickers, James R., Jay Mandelbaum, and Anthony C. Hermes. The New OMB Circular A-131: Revitalizing Value Engineering and Expanding Opportunities for Its Use. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, August 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada609409.

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