108,592 research outputs found
Gamble, F H, [No Service Number]
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/386757Surname: GAMBLE. Given Name(s) or Initials: F H. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: [No Registration Number]. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 9902.208527
Item: [2016.0049.19050] "Gamble, F H, [No Service Number]
Letter from A. H. Woodward to Charles B. Gamble, Birmingham, Alabama, May 18, 1945
A document from an extensive collection spanning four generations of the Woodward family that operated merchant pig iron companies in West Virginia and Alabama. The collection begins with Stimpson Harvey Woodward (S. H. Woodward), a native of Massachusetts, who moved from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, West Virginia in 1852. He had interests in an iron company as early as 1852 in West Virginia and began Alabama operations in 1869. The family business continued in Alabama until the death of S. H. Woodward's great-grandson in 1965
The influence of the Ratio Bias phenomenon on the elicitation of Standard Gamble utilities
This paper tests whether logically equivalent risk formats can lead to different health state utilities elicited by means of the standard gamble (SG) method. We compare SG utilities elicited when probabilities are framed in terms of frequencies with respect to 100 people in the population (i.e., X out of 100) with SG utilities elicited for frequencies with respect to 1,000 people in the population (i.e., Y out of 1,000). We found that utilities were significant higher when success and failure probabilities were framed as frequencies type “Y out of 1,000” rather than as frequencies type “X out of 100”. This framing effect, known as Ratio Bias, may have important consequences in resource allocation decisions.Framing effect, risk format, standard gamble, health state, dual-process theories.
Letter from W. T. Johnson to Dean W. H. Gamble
Letter from W. T. Johnson to Dean W. H. Gamble, thanking him for serving as a Workshop Committee Director at the Vocational Agriculture Teachers\u27 Conference
Gamble, Attention et respiration thoracique
Binet Alfred, Beaunis H., Bourdon B., Foucault Marcel, Larguier des Bancels J. Gamble, Attention et respiration thoracique. In: L'année psychologique. 1905 vol. 12. p. 661
County map of the state of Pennsylvania / drawn and engraved by W.H. Gamble, Philadelphia.
Terese Ann Paramore
This undated photograph, taken by Asheville Citizen-Times photographer Malcolm Gamble (Herbert Malcolm Gamble, Sr., born in 1921), shows Terese (Terri) Ann Paramore with a dog. Founder and director of the Mountain Youth Jamboree, Hubert H. Hayes (1901-1964) auditioned and directed youth to perform in folk dance, music, and folk and ballad singing. The jamboree was held in the Asheville City Auditorium (now known as Thomas Wolfe Auditorium) from 1948 to 1973, and Hayes’ wife, Leona Trantham Hayes (1913-1989) continued to direct the program after his death in 1964. Hubert Hayes was an author, playwright, and alumni of Duke University
Letter from A. H. Woodward to Procter and Gamble Distributing Company, Atlanta, Georgia, October 15, 1926
This item is from the correspondence of Allan Harvey Woodward. It is a part of a larger collection of papers of the Woodward Family, a Birmingham, Alabama family that operated the Woodward Iron Company
- …
