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  2. Values-based innovation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Values-based_innovation

    Business anthropology and ethnographic methods can be used to empirically explore and analyse values and values-based cultural practice within and across organisations, or for different stakeholder groups. [25] [26] Values-based business modelling activities can facilitate the exploration and elaboration of values-based business model innovation.

  3. Value theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_theory

    For them, values are embedded in mental structures associated with culture and ideology about what is desirable. A slightly different approach in anthropology focuses on the practical side of values, holding that values are constantly created through human activity. [132] Anthropological value theorists use values to compare cultures. [133]

  4. Theory of basic human values - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_basic_human_values

    The theory of basic human values is a theory of cross-cultural psychology and universal values developed by Shalom H. Schwartz. The theory extends previous cross-cultural communication frameworks such as Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory. Schwartz identifies ten basic human values, distinguished by their underlying motivation or goals, and ...

  5. Value sensitive design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_sensitive_design

    Value sensitive design (VSD) is a theoretically grounded approach to the design of technology that accounts for human values in a principled and comprehensive manner. [1] [2] VSD originated within the field of information systems design [3] and human-computer interaction [4] to address design issues within the fields by emphasizing the ethical values of direct and indirect stakeholders.

  6. Values education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Values_education

    Values education is the process by which people give moral values to each other. According to Powney et al. [1] It can be an activity that can take place in any human organisation. During which people are assisted by others, who may be older, in a condition experienced to make explicit our ethics in order to assess the effectiveness of these ...

  7. Values scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Values_scale

    By 1980, the values scale had fallen into disuse due to its archaic content, lack of religious inclusiveness, and dated language. Richard E. Kopelman, et al., recently updated the Allport-Vernon-Lindzey Study of Values. The motivation behind their update was to make the value scale more relevant to today; they believed that the writing was too ...

  8. A culture is a social system that shares a set of common values, in which such values permit social expectations and collective understandings of the good, beautiful and constructive. Without normative personal values, there would be no cultural reference against which to measure the virtue of individual values and so cultural identity would ...

  9. Value (interdisciplinary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_(interdisciplinary)

    Such values, however, can be considered not only from the point of view of a particular culture but from "the point of view of the universe" where integrating one's set of values with the principles of some higher truth ("selective copying" is the example he gives) may result in instances of non-conformity and other kinds of differentiation ...