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Surrogation – Knowledge and References - Taylor & Francis
Surrogation is a decision-making process where the best course of action for a patient is determined based on the experiences of others who have been in a similar situation .From: Ethics and Chronic Illness [2019] Related Topics. Cognitive dissonance. Heuristics. Attribute substitution.
taylorandfrancis.com
taylorandfrancis.com
Surrogation - Wikipedia
Surrogation is a psychological phenomenon found in business practices whereby a measure of a construct of interest evolves to replace that construct.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
SURROGATION Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1. The action of surrogating : substitution, subrogation. 2. An instance of surrogating. Word History Etymology Medieval Latin surrogation-, surrogatio.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
surrogation
surrogation Now rare. (sʌrəˈgeɪʃən) [ad. med.L. surrogātio, -ōnem, assimilated f. subrogātio subrogation. Cf. OF. surrogation, It. surrogazione.] 1. Appointment of a person to some office in place of another.1533 Bellenden Livy v. xiv. (S.T.S.) II. 195 Becaus sa grete myscheif fell to romanis eftir ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Surrogation: When Metrics Become Substitutes for the Real Thing
Surrogation is the term for when people become so focused on improving the metric that they lose sight of the nuanced complexity of the “real thing”.
www.kathleenschaub.com
www.kathleenschaub.com
Surrogation, or why we can't have nice things - Suspended Reason
I am nearly finished with a book-length treatment of the “surrogation” concept—that is, the substitution of a representation—be it a metonym ...
suspendedreason.com
suspendedreason.com
surrogation, n. meanings, etymology and more
The earliest known use of the noun surrogation is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for surrogation is from 1533, in a translation by John Bellenden, ...
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
Surrogation - The Behavioral Scientist
Surrogation is a psychological bias where an individual or an organization substitutes a strategy or a goal with a metric that was initially designed to ...
www.thebehavioralscientist.com
www.thebehavioralscientist.com
Surrogation - The Inexact Sciences
1. Introduction · 2. Behavioral vs. introjective surrogation · 3. Quantitative surrogation: The problem of value capture · 4. Surrogation and the crisis in ...
theinexactsciences.github.io
theinexactsciences.github.io
SURROGATE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of SURROGATE is one appointed to act in place of another : deputy. How to use surrogate in a sentence.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
subrogation
subrogation (sʌbrəˈgeɪʃən) [ad. L. subrogātio, -ōnem, n. of action f. subrogāre to subrogate. Cf. F. subrogation, Sp. subrogacion, Pg. subroga{cced}ão and see surrogation.] † 1. Substitution. Obs.1418–20 Lydg. Chron. Troy iv. 334 [He] seide it was noon eleccioun, But a maner subrogacioun, Be-cause h...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Surrogate
Surrogation, a psychological phenomenon in management science
Arts
Author surrogate or audience surrogate, reciprocal literary techniques
The Surrogates
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Reification (fallacy)
See also
All models are wrong
Counterfactual definiteness
Idolatry
Objectification
Philosophical realism
Surrogation
Hypostatic abstraction
References
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
McNamara fallacy
See also
Allegory of the cave
Goodhart's law
Newton's flaming laser sword
Occam's razor
Streetlight effect
Surrogation
Truth
Verificationism
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Goodhart's law
previous roles, and not the role of the new position
Reflexivity (social theory)
Reification (fallacy)
Specification gaming in artificial intelligence
Surrogation
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org