• According to the Multiple Resource Theory (Wickens, 2002), when the cognitive task is demanding, fewer attentional resources can be allocated to postural control, leading to degraded performance in postural control. (sfu.ca)
  • Prior to joining the Financial Standards Foundation, Carl was Global Director of Portfolio Risk Management at Merrill Lynch from 1990 - 2002. (gsvme.com)
  • The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) convened the second meeting of the Oak Ridge Reservation Health Effects Subcommittee (ORRHES) on January 18-19, 2001. (cdc.gov)
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (cdc.gov)
  • Rochelle P. Walensky is the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. (cdc.gov)
  • The MMWR series of publications is published by the Epidemiology Program Office, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta, GA 30333. (cdc.gov)
  • The National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collects, analyzes, and disseminates data on the health status of U.S. residents. (cdc.gov)
  • Behavioral control and attitude have more impact in the second stage than in the first. (jiad.org)
  • Two fundamental claims ground this theory: First, different types of motivation-or more broadly spoken-behavioral regulation are postulated with respect to the degree they represent autonomous or self-determined (vs. controlled) functioning on a continuum from low-i.e., external regulation and introjected regulation-to high values of self-regulation-i.e., identified regulation and intrinsic regulation. (frontiersin.org)
  • While managers may follow somewhat different strategic management routines, a sound process should include an analysis of the current business situation, the formulation of objectives and strategies based on that analysis, and an implementation and evaluation procedure that ensures progress toward each strategy and objective. (encyclopedia.com)
  • This article focuses on the formulation of appropriate strategic objectives based on a sound understanding of the internal and external environments faced by the firm. (encyclopedia.com)
  • In order to create appropriate strategic objectives, organizations work to understand their internal capabilities as well as the environment in which they operate. (encyclopedia.com)
  • The main aim of the strategic management process is to provide direction to a corporation towards attainment of derived goals and objectives (Certo & Peter, 1990). (supremeassignments.com)
  • Strategic planning makes use of five steps in its formulation (Certo & Peter, 1990). (supremeassignments.com)
  • The five steps of strategic planning include, the statement of mission and objectives, environmental scanning procedure, formulation of strategy, implementation of strategy and evaluation and control. (supremeassignments.com)
  • This research work is on strategic planning and control: tool for the growth and survival of small and medium scale enterprise (SMES). (com.ng)
  • This study x-rays the need for strategic planning and control in actualizing the intended objectives of SMES in the country. (com.ng)
  • This strategy was prepared in response to the national government initiative of developing a 25 years strategic plan for all sectors in Sudan. (who.int)
  • Increasing nurses' use of feedback to promote infection control practices in a head injury treatment center. (behavior.org)
  • Browne, W.P. (1990) Organized interests and their issue niches: A search for pluralism in a policy domain. (springer.com)
  • The internal analysis recognizes the company's strength and weaknesses while the external analysis reveals niches and threats to the company. (supremeassignments.com)
  • Both public- and private-sector organizations need a way to ensure that their IT functions support business strategies and objectives. (cio.com)
  • Effective internal communication is necessary for the coordination and implementation of control policies. (syncsci.com)
  • Strategy implementation employs a set of programs and budgetary boundaries. (supremeassignments.com)
  • These findings can inform future implementation strategies and research in LCS shared decision-making. (bvsalud.org)
  • guidelines is to further STD prevention by providing a STD prevention programs exist in highly diverse, resource to assist in the design, implementation, and complex, and dynamic social and health service set evaluation of STD prevention and control programs. (cdc.gov)
  • Strengths and weaknesses are typically internal to a company and, therefore, largely under a company's control. (encyclopedia.com)
  • Evaluation and control entails parametric measurement of the company's performance under the formulated strategy. (supremeassignments.com)
  • communication with key internal and external stakeholders on risk management issues, including executive counsel to central monetary authorities, regulatory and supervisory officials, and international financial institutions. (gsvme.com)
  • and a set of governance mechanisms for controlling the organizational units and the linkages between units. (wikipedia.org)
  • support systematic research on the effects of different clinical, organizational, and financing options for end-of-life care and on the effectiveness of alternative strategies for improving care and outcomes for patients and those close to them. (nationalacademies.org)
  • spatial dissolution of work, detemporalization of work in virtual landscapes, dynamization of work culture and identity , and employee empowerment and decentralization of organizational control . (lu.se)
  • We test the time-series version of this hypothesis by looking at changes in Chilean groups over 20 years (1990-2009). (eur.nl)
  • Over time, the compliance effect of external subjective norms on usage intention decreases, in favor of the internalization effect through perceived ease of use. (jiad.org)
  • These programmes were designed to have maximum potential to reach the most physiologically and socio-politically vulnerable, whilst at the same time not either reinforcing, or undermining , the control of ex-FAR or Interahamwe elements over the refugee populations. (ennonline.net)
  • A typical distributed multimedia application would use both protocols: IP for the transfer of traditional data and control information, and ST2 for the transfer of real-time data. (irt.org)
  • At the same time there was an internal recognition that changes were taking place in the dynamic relationship between the private security industry and the public police. (aic.gov.au)
  • This strategy comes on a time the health system is facing many challenges resulting from the high burden of communicable diseases, recent increasing burden of non communicable diseases, the economic constraints, poverty, the civil conflict that has been going on for decades and the climatic factors related to floods and drought. (who.int)
  • With many STDs, such as syphilis, on a downward trend, now is the time to employ new strategies and new ways of looking at STD control. (cdc.gov)
  • While empirical research has demonstrated the critical nature of internal controls, there is insufficient evidence to indicate that they are effective at detecting and preventing irregularities in the public sector. (syncsci.com)
  • The control of industrial accidents: Economic theory and empirical evidence. (behavior.org)
  • The need for formal corporate and IT governance practices across U.S. organizations was fueled by the enactment of laws and regulations, including the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act , in the 1990 and early 2000s that resulted from the fallout from several high-profile corporate fraud and deception cases. (cio.com)
  • By following a formal framework, organizations can produce measurable results toward achieving their strategies and goals. (cio.com)
  • To ensure they meet internal and external requirements, many organizations implement a formal IT governance program that provides a framework of best practices and controls. (cio.com)
  • This model for evaluating internal controls is from the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). (cio.com)
  • Furthermore, these coalitions, consistent with Butterfloss et al' s description of coalitions, are: issue-orientated, formally organized structures uniting individuals and groups with a common purpose, focused to act on specific goals external to the coalition, and 'committed to recruit members and organizations with diverse talents and resources to achieve these goals' (Butterfoss, Goodman, Wandersman, 1993). (nasdonline.org)
  • Despite this dramatic transformation, groups remained mostly unchanged in terms of relative size, industrial diversification, vertical integration, control structures, internal capital markets, and reliance on external funds (minority equity plus debt). (eur.nl)
  • ITIL comprises five sets of management best practices for service strategy, design, transition (such as change management), operation and continual service improvement. (cio.com)
  • The problem is that while CEOs strategize about becoming digital businesses, their IT departments are still mired in processes, practices, and success measures developed for a cost-control world. (thoughtworks.com)
  • The process takes into consideration the available resources and assesses the external and internal structures in which a company operates. (supremeassignments.com)
  • INTOSAI I. Guidelines for Internal Control Standards for the Public Sector. (syncsci.com)
  • Calatayud leads Firemon's corporate development program and provides thought leadership regarding product strategy, product management, and research and development. (cio.com)
  • For this research, we define IDTV as (1) a group of technologies that gives (2) users the (3) possibility to take control (4) over their TV experience, (5) enabling interactivity with the content (6) (in)dependently of the distribution channel. (jiad.org)
  • Furthermore, recent research points to more rapid intensification of major storms in the Atlantic basin (Trends in Global Tropical Cyclone Activity: 1990-2021, Philip J. Klotzbach et al. (utmb.edu)
  • Around the world efforts are underway to develop a resistant export banana variety, using both conventional breeding and genetic modification, as well as research into disease detection and alternative methods of control. (exeter.ac.uk)
  • Employing dual-task paradigms, previous research has provided evidence that posture control is associated with cognitive processing (Chen et al. (sfu.ca)
  • She served on the frontline of the COVID-19 pandemic and conducted research on vaccine delivery and strategies to reach underserved communities. (cdc.gov)
  • COSO, COSO Internal Control - Integrated Framework Principles. (syncsci.com)
  • COSO, Internal Control, Integrated Framework: Executive Summary. (syncsci.com)
  • COSO, COSO Enterprise Risk Management - Integrating with Strategy and Performance: Compendium of Examples, J.B. Suzanne Dawson, Editor. (syncsci.com)
  • Commission, C.o.S.O.o.t.T., COSO Internal control-integrated framework: Guidance on monitoring internal control systems, Volume III: Examples. (syncsci.com)
  • Van der Heyden subsequently held the Wendel Chair in the Large Family Firm, the Solvay Chair of Technological Innovation, and the Mubadala Chair in Corporate Governance and Strategy. (wikipedia.org)
  • Essentially, IT governance provides a structure for aligning IT strategy with business strategy. (cio.com)
  • We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, Web of Knowledge and Scopus databases for articles, using appropriate search strategies, up to 2 June 2020. (who.int)
  • Small manipulations of a chaotic system can control chaos , e.g., stabilize an unstable periodic orbit , direct chaotic trajectories to desired locations, or achieve other useful goals. (scholarpedia.org)
  • The desirable goals may vary, and different types of goals lead to qualitatively different control problems. (scholarpedia.org)
  • In all cases, the fundamental attributes of chaos imply that the control goals can be potentially achieved by use of only small controlling perturbations. (scholarpedia.org)
  • 8. Goals of the strategy. (who.int)
  • The strategy outlined the priorities, directions and goals of the health programmes. (who.int)
  • In a tertiary educational context, it does not mean students having control over the content and methods of learning but rather taking responsibility for their own learning and moving toward epistemological autonomy. (ijede.ca)
  • In this respect, the internal dynamics of NPT conferences assume special importance while the external context, including instructions from national governments, continues to have undisputed influence. (amacad.org)
  • The third step of strategy formulation encompasses the use of data from the environment scan. (supremeassignments.com)
  • Two decades after strategy formulation, the company is operational in 60 countries worldwide. (supremeassignments.com)
  • 10 vector-borne diseases, accounting lack of trained medical entomologists the opportunities and chal enges that for 11% of the global burden in an area and vector-control experts to prevent would influence the sustainability of the where only 8% of the global population and control any adverse health impacts. (who.int)
  • Findings are presented for strategies, trends, and transitions of preferred behavior including observables that reveal hidden skills including a visual search of a hidden skill with world record Olympian sprint performances. (thesportjournal.org)
  • As emphasized throughout this report, the knowledge base about the dying process and the effectiveness of different care strategies is limited. (nationalacademies.org)
  • The impact of internal audit attributes on the effectiveness of internal control over operations and compliance. (syncsci.com)
  • The search for a new strategy was helped by the 1993 Audit Commission report into police effectiveness (Audit Commission 1993). (aic.gov.au)
  • In the new "risk society" (Ericson & Haggerty 1997) the police were seen as the source of risk management data for a range of external institutions. (aic.gov.au)
  • Achievements include establishing formal exposure reporting and internal risk ratings for over 130 national jurisdictions, expanded assessment of financial and non-financial factors for description of business risk, and shaped internal business strategy and business practice among the firm's products in all global locations. (gsvme.com)
  • Mr. Bailey has more than 30 years of federal service in various senior-level positions at the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Department of the Air Force. (cdc.gov)
  • Why a 25 years strategy. (who.int)
  • By analyzing the direct and indirect relationships between internal control components, this study focuses on the quality of internal control in Ghana's public sector. (syncsci.com)
  • By contrast, opportunities and threats are usually derived from the external market situation and require some response from a company if it is to perform well. (encyclopedia.com)
  • According to the evidence, public administrators require high-quality information and communication tools to supplement their existing control systems. (syncsci.com)
  • A successful supply-chain strategy depends to a large extent on the information system backbone that supports it. (inet-tr.org.tr)
  • When the pandemic reached its cities, Europe was already under severe internal and external stress. (dgap.org)
  • By throwing the continent and the world into an unprecedented economic crisis while security challenges abound, the pandemic has exposed Europe to a risk of irreversible loss of capacity for collective action, hampering its influence and control over its regional areas of interest. (dgap.org)
  • To many observers it seemed that direct attack and physical abuse of refugees, as well as denial of access and resources was part of AFDL military strategy. (ennonline.net)
  • Meeting student needs for personal control means providing them with the appropriate resources and support they need to be self-efficacious. (ijede.ca)
  • Hence, maintaining the seated posture was selected as the postural control task in the study, as it requires cognitive resources and seating is one of the most common body positions while learning. (sfu.ca)
  • The formulated strategy is implemented within the scope of the available resources. (supremeassignments.com)
  • In this role, he provides executive oversight of CDC's financial resources, human resources strategy and workforce development, information technology services, and the safety and security of CDC's workforce and facilities. (cdc.gov)
  • It is defined as the motivational style in which children engage in an activity because of interest and enjoyment, rather than because of external incentives. (frontiersin.org)
  • Children, who experience introjected regulation complete an activity, because they feel internal pressures-such as shame or guilt-to fulfill the task. (frontiersin.org)
  • Prominent assignments in Market risk, Credit risk, Operational risk and Legal risk include being Voting member of the Corporate Credit Committee, Chairman of the Merrill Lynch International Bank's New York Credit Committee, Chairman and Coordinator of the firm-wide financing rates ("haircut") committee, Member of various internal working groups to manage capital allocation and country risk issues. (gsvme.com)
  • We would like to express our commitment to make the positive changes and to co-ordinate our actions and invite all partners to move forward with a spirit of openness and ownership to bring about this strategy into reality. (who.int)
  • Regulation of distance to the screen is one potential indicator of the quality of postural control (Balaban et al. (sfu.ca)
  • ogy and disease vector control must be a Methods top priority for Pakistan. (who.int)
  • Both of these fundamental attributes of chaotic dynamical systems can be taken advantage of to devise chaos control methods. (scholarpedia.org)
  • UTMB is therefore developing strategies to improve options for sheltering in place with patients. (utmb.edu)
  • The height of this internal focus was the mid-1990's infatuation with Business Process Re-engineering (BPR). (thoughtworks.com)
  • {}" style="cursor: pointer;">Chapter 10 examines strategies for improving public performance by measuring performance. (perlego.com)
  • It was thought that this strategy was developed and implemented in order to weaken the support base for the Interahamwe and ex-FAR. (ennonline.net)
  • The military said that it was ready to operate without external support for several days in case Y2K problems caused a disruption of Israeli civilian society. (strategypage.com)
  • Intervention: A web-based patient- and clinician-facing LCS decision support tool vs an attention control intervention. (bvsalud.org)
  • ABSTRACT The Health Services Academy has launched a 12-month postgraduate diploma course in medical entomology and disease vector control. (who.int)
  • The 1988 Agriculture at Risk, Report to the Nation Agricultural Occupational and Environmental Health: Policy Strategies for the Future was a result of the work of coalitions and grass roots input (Donham,1989). (nasdonline.org)
  • However, the banana remains under-researched compared with the major crops, there has been little academic analysis of the resilience of the banana trade nor development of mitigation strategies to maintain supply or manage the impact of sudden catastrophe. (exeter.ac.uk)
  • On behalf of the government I would like to thank all those participated in the development of this strategy. (who.int)
  • In order to determine whether ongoing controls are consistent with sound public policy, a survey was designed and distributed to public sector employees and managers. (syncsci.com)
  • Therefore, a working knowledge of the anatomy of the male lower urinary tract and external genitalia is critical for the clinician treating a patient with Fournier gangrene. (medscape.com)
  • Intelligence-led policing represents a recent approach and is one of the more prevalent of the current "shifts in crime control philosophy and policing practice" (Maguire 2000). (aic.gov.au)
  • It seeks to combine the prohibitive aspect of a disarmament treaty (with regard to NNWS, in Articles I, II, and III) and the advisory approach of an arms control treaty (with regard to the NWS, in Articles IV and VI). (amacad.org)