Operational definitions
Found 5 free book(s)ABBREVIATIONS USED IN AIRWAY MANUAL DEFINITIONS
ww1.jeppesen.comHO By Operational Requirements hPa Hectopascal (one hectopascal = one millibar) HR Hours (period of time) HS During Hours of Scheduled Operations HST High Speed Taxiway Turn-off HUD Head-up Display HUDLS Head-Up Display Landing System ... DEFINITIONS ADVISORY SERVICE ...
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivations: Classic Definitions ...
selfdeterminationtheory.orgOperational Definitions Intrinsic motivation has been operationally defined in various ways, al-though there have been two measures that have been most often used. Basic experimental research (e.g., Deci, 1971) has rested primarily on a behavioral measure of intrinsic motivation called the ‘‘free choice’’ measure. In experi-
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
www.bis.orgBecause operational risk is an evolving discipline, this paper is intended to be an evergreen document, and as further issues are identified and ... The absence of definitions in the Basel II text for “gross loss” or “recoveries” and varying loss data collection practices among AMA banks results in differences in the
Definition Of Technology Readiness Levels
esto.nasa.govan operational environment (ground or space): End of system development. Fully integrated with operational hardware and software systems. Most user documentation, training documentation, and maintenance documentation completed. All functionality tested in simulated and operational scenarios. Verification and Validation (V&V) completed.
JP 2-0, Joint Intelligence - Joint Chiefs of Staff
www.jcs.milOperational intelligence is primarily used by CCDRs and subordinate joint force commanders (JFCs) and their component commanders. Tactical intelligence is used by commanders, planners, and operators for planning and conducting battles, engagements, and special missions. Principles of Joint Intelligence Perspective