aversion$6201$ - ترجمة إلى الهولندية
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aversion$6201$ - ترجمة إلى الهولندية

PREFERENCE IN DECISION THEORY AND ECONOMICS OF KNOWN RISKS TO UNKNOWN RISKS
Uncertainty aversion

aversion      
n. afkeer, aversie
eye contact         
  • flirt]] (with the camera) or to tolerate having one's image taken by staying anonymous while watching the counterpart.
  • Two men staring each other in the eye during a political debate
  • Two students locking eyes
EYES GAZING INTO OTHER EYES
Gaze aversion; Eye Contact; Eye-contact; Seeing into eye; Eye gaze; Eye-gazing; Eye gazing
oogcontact
anorexia nervosa         
  • Two images of an anorexic woman published in 1900 in "Nouvelle Iconographie de la Salpêtrière". The case was titled "Un cas d'anorexie hysterique" (A case of hysteric anorexia).
  • Genetic correlations of anorexia with psychiatric and metabolic traits
  • Dysregulation of the [[serotonin]] pathways has been implicated in the cause and mechanism of anorexia.<ref name="Rikani" />
  • 4–25}}{{refend}}
  • The back of a person with anorexia
  • Why do anorexia patients feel fat? - Anouk Keizer ([[Utrecht University]])
TYPE OF EATING DISORDER
Anorexia Nervosa; Annorexia; Anorexic; Cibophobia; Sitophobia; Sitiophobia; Anarexia; Fear of eating; Anerexia; Anorexic wannabes; Anorexic yearning; Weight phobia; Aversion to food; Pocrescophobia; Anorexia; Anorexia Nevrosa; Causes of anorexia nervosa
n. anorexia nervosa (eetstoornis)

تعريف

aversion
¦ noun a strong dislike or disinclination.
Derivatives
aversive adjective

ويكيبيديا

Ambiguity aversion

In decision theory and economics, ambiguity aversion (also known as uncertainty aversion) is a preference for known risks over unknown risks. An ambiguity-averse individual would rather choose an alternative where the probability distribution of the outcomes is known over one where the probabilities are unknown. This behavior was first introduced through the Ellsberg paradox (people prefer to bet on the outcome of an urn with 50 red and 50 black balls rather than to bet on one with 100 total balls but for which the number of black or red balls is unknown).

There are two categories of imperfectly predictable events between which choices must be made: risky and ambiguous events (also known as Knightian uncertainty). Risky events have a known probability distribution over outcomes while in ambiguous events the probability distribution is not known. The reaction is behavioral and still being formalized. Ambiguity aversion can be used to explain incomplete contracts, volatility in stock markets, and selective abstention in elections (Ghirardato & Marinacci, 2001).

The concept is expressed in the English proverb: "Better the devil you know than the devil you don't".