How to make a decision: The analytic hierarchy process

How to make a decision: The analytic hierarchy process

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Article ID: iaor19951445
Country: United States
Volume: 24
Issue: 6
Start Page Number: 19
End Page Number: 43
Publication Date: Nov 1994
Journal: Interfaces
Authors:
Keywords: decision: applications, systems, analytic hierarchy process
Abstract:

People make three general types of judgments to express importance, preference, or likelihood and use them to choose the base among alternatives in the presence of environmental, social, political, and other influences. They base these judgments on knowledge in memory or from analyzing benefits, costs, and risks. From past knowledge, standards of excellence and poorness can sometimes be developed and then used to rate the alternatives one at a time. This is useful in such repetitive situations as student admissions and salary raises that must conform with established norms. Without norms one compares alternatives instead of rating them. Comparisons must fall in an admissible range of consistency. The analytic hierarchy process (AHP) includes both the rating and comparison methods. Rationality requires developing a reliable hierarchic structure or feedback network that includes criteria of various types of influence, stakeholders, and decision alternatives to determine the best choice.

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