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1 portunity to gain a more traditional reward (money).
2  unresolved by the context (e.g., candy-mint-money).
3 on to a particular meaning (e.g., candy-mint-money).
4 ifferences strongly influence LLIN value for money.
5 e two actions may save considerable time and money.
6 d a Roulette task in which they won and lost money.
7 ve money; used alternative therapies to save money.
8 g constant the overall proportion of donated money.
9 icular, MCBs and SBCs provide good value for money.
10 within accepted benchmarks of good value for money.
11 rison, also elicited equivalent choices with money.
12 ambles with equal odds of winning and losing money.
13 alignancies may provide reasonable value for money.
14 der) decide how to split a certain amount of money.
15 ca, where participants traded stocks to earn money.
16 confounded by differences in how teens value money.
17 a target to either win money or avoid losing money.
18  stressfulness may improve recovery and save money.
19 s complete web-based tasks for small sums of money.
20 ove programme performance and thus value for money.
21 es of either winning or avoiding the loss of money.
22 farin, they may not represent good value for money.
23 pensity to 'ride' financial bubbles and lose money.
24 is technique to the cold case of DB Cooper's money.
25 n exerting effort in anticipation of winning money.
26 ld be made available on grounds of value for money.
27 er costs, GSK VCV may offer higher value for money.
28 ting and unsafe sex in exchange for drugs or money.
29 ngulate cortex mainly represented the SV for money.
30  unclear whether AGH provides good value for money.
31 for most ID patients provides good value for money.
32 g techniques could save significant time and money.
33 and in a loss condition using a fictive $100 money.
34 ing, at thresholds considered good value for money.
35 ing money illegally and scamming someone for money.
36 ns and therefore provide excellent value-for-money.
37 ction involving squeezing a handgrip to earn money.
38  offered a 50/50 chance of gaining or losing money.
39 as predictive of the choice for cocaine over money.
40  are given one opportunity to split a sum of money.
41  chance that BPM provides the best value for money.
42 , or delaying filling a prescription to save money.
43 ts willing to give up half of their allotted money.
44 uate compounds earlier, saving both time and money.
45 ificantly lower happiness than obtaining the money.
46 likely to return wallets that contained more money.
47 substantially by 2030, saving both lives and money.
48  among which RFA provided the best value for money.
49 ives decisions," and "95% the bottom line is money.
50 hich of two receivers would receive the most money.
51 dds and obstacles, and all the while on soft money?
52                                       Mobile money, a service that allows monetary value to be stored
53 limit, they would "bust" and either lose the money accrued on the current trial (low-penalty trials)
54 ticular, we explore the meanings and uses of money across ethnic groups and at different positions on
55 nation continues to represent good value for money across most Gavi countries despite lower rotavirus
56       We use a public goods game played with money and a naturalistic measure of behavior involving t
57         Double-duty interventions could save money and be more efficient than single-duty interventio
58 ts made choices between different amounts of money and different numbers of painful electric shocks.
59 NESCO World Heritage Site, and estimated the money and effort required to remove the remaining debris
60 ascades, resulting in loss of precious time, money and finally compromised data.
61 ven by factors that fall into three domains: money and finance; knowledge, bias, and uncertainty; and
62 e vmPFC significantly represented the SVs of money and food on a common scale appropriate for choice
63 on analysis demonstrated interactions across money and food valuation areas and the common areas in t
64 dition using both real and hypothetical $100 money and in a loss condition using a fictive $100 money
65                   However, transformation of money and insurance coverage into cost-effective service
66 le energy development can bring infusions of money and jobs to local communities, an array of risks t
67  design as well as saving considerable time, money and labor.
68 ency and accountability for efficient use of money and maximise the effect of available funding to pr
69                                      Lack of money and negative staff attitudes were reasons for low
70 pendently to the stochastic delivery of both money and pain, we studied the impact of decreased brain
71 s there a difference between ACOs that saved money and those that did not (P = .391).
72 ialized personnel and it involves much lower money and time investment compared to traditional method
73 rpretations, and drain resources in terms of money and time spent.
74 is true for both decisions incentivized with money and with food.
75 s as they performed a concurrent appetitive (money) and aversive (effort) learning task.
76 signal of reward in both the economic (e.g., money) and social (e.g., praise and status) domains.
77 benefit or requires infeasibly large sums of money, and it distracts from the real problem: maximizin
78 mprove consumer safety and air quality, save money, and lower greenhouse gas emissions.
79  a panoply of societal costs, save taxpayers money, and promote prosperity.
80 d consent allegations, still present a time, money, and reputation toll for physicians.
81 cess; clinicians are frustrated by the time, money, and resources required for prior authorizations,
82 r pursuit of rewards, such as food, alcohol, money, and sex, the basis for these shifts is not clearl
83 iance comes at the cost of significant time, money, and staff resources.
84 rding the costs and benefits of giving time, money, and support to others and the costs and benefits
85  requires a specific combination of time and money, and there are inherent problems associated with e
86 in the face of these events, users of mobile money are better able to tap into remittances to finance
87                        Since saving time and money are critical issues while developing innovative fu
88                    As such, large amounts of money are spent each year on attempts to control them.
89           It would potentially save time and money arising from gelatinization and lead to improvemen
90  of reward, with the goal of earning as much money as possible.
91  offer (in which case both players split the money as proposed) or reject the offer (in which case bo
92 to the species extinction crisis is to spend money as soon as it becomes available, and this is often
93  imaging while they pressed a button to earn money as the response-reward relationship changed over t
94 oney; delayed filling a prescription to save money; asked doctor for lower cost medication to save mo
95 0 lost wallets containing varying amounts of money at public and private institutions and measured wh
96 dapted to the difficulty of the task and the money at stake.
97 trading is, the less likely they are to lose money at the end of the day.
98  computer mouse to choose between amounts of money at various delays.
99 ured by bids in an incentive-compatible real-money auction), although a modest share was willing to p
100  involving choice between varying amounts of money available immediately and a standard amount of $10
101      Lack of trust among strangers thus made money behaviorally essential.
102 : one player proposes a division of a sum of money between herself and a second player, who either ac
103 ation (HD-tDCS) while participants allocated money between themselves and a charity in a modified dic
104 ked doctor for lower cost medication to save money; bought prescription drugs from another country to
105  series of offers in which they will receive money but a planned actual charity donation will be redu
106 he selection of one meaning (e.g., coin-mint-money) but failed to emerge when competition between the
107 els of positive outcomes (e.g., prestige and money), but women anticipated more negative outcomes (e.
108 ccording to typical benchmarks for value for money, but achieving substantial population-level health
109       Humans may be patient when it comes to money, but chimpanzees are willing to wait longer than h
110 ticipants' willingness to harm strangers for money, but not participants' willingness to harm strange
111 trangers when they imagined harming them for money, but not when they imagined harming them for their
112             We raise the question of whether money buys happiness, separately for these two aspects o
113 an unfair procedure than when allocated less money by a fair procedure (studies 6 and 7).
114 nal magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) gained money by accurately predicting the outcomes of computeri
115 age receiver was happier when allocated more money by an unfair procedure than when allocated less mo
116  arterial and central venous catheters saves money by preventing major catheter-related infections, e
117 ever, despite large investments of staff and money by the organizations involved, only a fraction of
118 nning phase in which the participants earned money by working, and a neuronal scanning phase in which
119 lso variable, so that much time, effort, and money can go into the preparation and initial analysis o
120 qual access to care means that we spend less money caring for Black patients than for White patients.
121            Current variation in the forms of money challenges economic anthropologists and historians
122  the intervention represented good value-for-money, clinicians should discuss referral for CBT with a
123 ndustry-sponsored funding, with most of this money concentrated among clinical trial ($110,869) and m
124 iately before each block of 10 trials of the money condition and at 1 Hz (inhibitory stimulation) bef
125 ctiveness, avoid drug overexposure, and save money considering the extremely high cost of the drug.
126   Significantly, we eliminated the time- and money-consuming oligonucleotide purification steps throu
127  reach a fixed target sum through successive money contributions, knowing that if they fail, they wil
128 ant of the arcade whac-a-mole game) in which money could be earned if players hit brief-appearing vis
129 ed when lying had financial consequences and money could be gained; when losses were at stake, indivi
130 y that society is getting less value for its money could not be statistically excluded, and there is
131 days at a pub), or merely estimated what the money could purchase in the scenario.
132 cts expressed preferences between amounts of money delayed by 4 months and smaller amounts available
133 es to save money; took less medicine to save money; delayed filling a prescription to save money; ask
134 s music, claim much of our time, energy, and money despite lacking any clear adaptive benefits like f
135 elf-reported accuracy, allowing them to gain money dishonestly by lying about the accuracy of their p
136 HR, 5.7); for HCV, being a male who receives money/drugs for sex (HR, 5.6) and sharing noninjecting c
137  either imagined specific events of spending money (e.g., pound 35 in 180 days at a pub), or merely e
138 djusted spending quintile spent 124% as much money each day as those in the lowest quintile.
139 ctrical shocks to a 'victim' in exchange for money, either by their own free choice, or following ord
140 as independent beneficial effects other than money, especially for women with no formal education.
141 ombinations of the classic four functions of money, especially the relationship between store of valu
142                                   What makes money essential for the functioning of modern society?
143  pragmatism, patient centeredness, value for money, feasibility, and transparency define useful clini
144 f imports and exports based on international money flow.
145 ter-deprived subjects make risky choices for money, food, and water both in and out of a brain scanne
146                        Risk factors (lacking money for basic needs, combat experience, alcohol misuse
147  made choices between receiving an amount of money for certain and taking a gamble.
148 Most important, allowing families to receive money for donation from a deceased person, who is at no
149 lack of innovation, an over-reliance on soft money for faculty salaries, the use of graduate students
150 eeking surgical care when needed included no money for health care (Sierra Leone: n = 103; 55%), a pe
151 d longer-term trips, and that travelers save money for longer trips when travelers adhere to malaria
152 ntification of SDM clones will save time and money for researchers.
153  inconsistent condom use, acceptance of more money for sex without a condom, and experience of client
154 r model suggests that healthcare payers save money for short- and longer-term trips, and that travele
155 thout these problems took significantly more money for themselves and left significantly less money i
156 imately happier if they ended up getting the money for themselves.
157           Sofosbuvir provides good value for money for treatment-experienced patients with HCV genoty
158 e function of cash, soft currencies, and new money forms.
159 ebt, sold or refinanced their home, borrowed money from friends or family, or experienced a 20% or gr
160 otential to improve health outcomes and save money from the societal perspective over the long-term.
161 care beneficiaries would save both lives and money from the societal perspective.
162 increases the likelihood of winners to steal money from their counterparts in a subsequent unrelated
163 paid to punish those they believed had taken money from them by administering varying amounts of unpl
164        Citizens do differentiate between aid money given to nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) comp
165 his may reverse a decades-long trend of more money going to older PIs.
166             Personal resources (eg, time and money) had a minimal association with charity care provi
167 h prior research, informing donors that seed money has already been raised increases donations, as do
168 cale-up is urgent, the emphasis on value for money has become an increasing priority.
169                                       Mobile money has therefore increased the efficiency of the allo
170 te problem (paying the bills takes away some money I need for other activities); and a great problem
171 ip strength to assess the motivation to earn money (i) for oneself, (ii) for anonymous ingroup fans,
172  in incentive groups, additionally, received money if their child was timely immunised (immunisation
173 ngly associated with shoplifting were making money illegally and scamming someone for money.
174 es of winning or losing different amounts of money in 15 patients with problem gambling (PRGs) and 16
175 re likely to work for cigarette puffs versus money in a progressive ratio, choice task (odds ratio 2.
176 palpation of the abdomen, and expenditure of money in ANC.
177 rmless, commensal relatives, saving time and money in clinical diagnostics.
178                      As with attitudes about money in humans, these risk attitudes were strongly weal
179     The birth and explosive growth of mobile money in Kenya has provided economists with an opportuni
180 cument the lightning-fast adoption of mobile money in Kenya, which was faster than most documented mo
181 y for themselves and left significantly less money in the charity donation; AlAn's game outcomes were
182                                 When winning money in the real world, individuals sustaining positive
183 re pessimistic predictions regarding winning money in the study (d = -0.47) and were less willing to
184 nt cultures, and we analyze the gendering of money in the world of high finance and in contexts of ec
185 tral-medial amygdala invest nearly 100% more money in unfamiliar others in a trust game than do healt
186 ght to equalize allocations of both pain and money, in a manner which indicated that inequality carri
187 willing to sacrifice a more tangible reward, money, in order to reminisce about positive past experie
188 incidental, and 9 lagging) and 5 other trade/money indexes.
189 ed with self-reports of task engagement, and money-induced activations in the lateral prefrontal cort
190 l predictor of the noncontingent delivery of money inducing participants to perform more avidly an ac
191                    Given the small amount of money involved, it seems unlikely that financial incenti
192 orticolimbic reward circuit to gradations of money is altered; 2) the lack of a correlation between o
193                                       Mobile money is an innovation that allows individuals to store,
194 t, even when subjects cannot report how much money is at stake, they nevertheless deploy more force f
195 is low, the apparent motive to gain research money is distrusted.
196                             Knowing how much money is invested in funding mental health research, and
197 health outcomes, and a significant amount of money is lost into the system by paying for these compli
198                                          The money itself also has significant effects on most outcom
199 al cost that represents reasonable value for money judged using US benchmarks for cost-effectiveness.
200 to many factors, including cost (in time and money), lack of proven efficacies of practices and lack
201 ral shifts in the salience of cocaine now vs money later, we found that ketamine, as compared to the
202  individual discount rates-the rate by which money loses value over time.
203 back-related negativity (FRN) in response to money loss during risk taking with real rewards compared
204 reduced risk taking after negative feedback (money loss) during the BART with real rewards compared t
205 ters were evaluated in two tomato genotypes (Money maker and high pigment-1) subjected to post harves
206 ntration of ascorbic acid and carotenoids in Money maker flesh and peel, while high pigment-1 fruits
207 ith the exception of redness (a *), which in Money maker was found to increase in both flesh and peel
208  as experiencing SD (everyday living, 19.5%; money matters, 15.6%; self and others, 18.1%).
209 al distress (SD) comprising everyday living, money matters, and self and others subscales, plus five
210                  Nurse staffing cuts to save money might adversely affect patient outcomes.
211 ch as deciding on whether to keep undeserved money, motivated forgetting is more likely.
212   This method greatly decreases the time and money necessary to perform DNA-based comparisons of biod
213 d that provides an estimate of the value for money of an expensive repair of a congenital heart disea
214 ults report greater happiness after spending money on a time-saving purchase than on a material purch
215 sk predicting whether they would win or lose money on each trial given three known win probabilities
216 ons, participants were willing to spend more money on food items only after sleep deprivation.
217 irmed or discarded to avoid wasting time and money on novel projects.
218 such as misrepresenting their income to save money on taxes.
219 lows individuals to store, send, and receive money on their mobile phone via text message.
220 = 6,271), we show that individuals who spend money on time-saving services report greater life satisf
221 mprove maternal and infant outcomes and save money; Option B increases health benefits and decreases
222 ry cues to respond to a target to either win money or avoid losing money.
223           Overall, 15.6% of parents borrowed money or cut back on necessities to pay for their childr
224  hardship was measured by ever (1) borrowing money or going into debt, (2) filing for bankruptcy, (3)
225 points]), but had fewer reports of borrowing money or going without necessities (difference of 5.5 pe
226 ale sex workers who sell or exchange sex for money or goods encompass a very diverse population acros
227 r incremental unit of resource (for example, money or human capacity).
228  is not yet clear that such differences save money or improve quality of care.
229                    That is, if one just lost money or won money, this may impact future decisions.
230  appropriate to the context (e.g., coin-mint-money) or under conditions of increased competition when
231 o save money, taking less medication to save money, or delaying filling a prescription to save money.
232 mmon neural currency for outcomes like food, money, or social praise.
233 perceptual effects: the more a person valued money over pain, the more perceived intensity increased
234               Participants promised to spend money over the next 4 weeks either on others (experiment
235 however, rapid and accurate testing can save money overall by initiating appropriate treatment and in
236  predictions about future performance (e.g., money raised) for racially homogenous teams than for rac
237 eparated, not in a relationship, not earning money, receipt of government welfare, and experiencing f
238  Xpert, it is likely to offer good value for money relative to smear microscopy.
239 from their partner (input) and the amount of money repaid to their partner (output).
240                           While the time and money required for the collection of genotype data were
241 , knowing that if they did not stop pursuing money reward before a secret varying time limit, they wo
242 tly, no learning deficits were observed with money reward.
243 ived food reward and the other half received money reward.
244 difficulty inhibiting food-rewarded, but not money-rewarded, appetitive behaviour, suggesting that ob
245                                   We explore money's ability to ascribe value, give autonomy, and pro
246 e conducted a randomized, voucher-based real-money sales trial with 1638 households with unimproved l
247 21, respectively; 1.12, 1.03-1.21; p=0.005), money saved for delivery or emergency (5730 [86%] of 668
248 ms of malaria at ANC visit and the amount of money spent during the visit.
249  of QIIs has opportunity costs; the time and money spent on an ineffective QII might be better spent
250 consistently operate with limited budgets of money, status, trust, or other forms of social utility.
251 h trustworthy identities attracting 42% more money (Study 1), and remains significant though reduced
252                   Tokens endogenously became money: subjects took to reward help with a token and to
253 d harming them for immoral behavior, but not money, suggesting that morally motivated perpetrators ma
254 We estimate that access to the Kenyan mobile money system M-PESA increased per capita consumption lev
255  months they reported skipping doses to save money, taking less medication to save money, or delaying
256                       Humans bargaining over money tend to reject unfair offers, whilst chimpanzees b
257 ded more quality-adjusted life year for less money than treatment after LT or nontreatment.
258 fluenced by conditioned reinforcers, such as money, than by primary reinforcers.
259 n the state contribute to an overall pool of money that is used to reimburse costs to individual mark
260     We explore the psychological meanings of money that parallel its economic functions.
261 ers experimentally manipulated the amount of money that participants would receive, the participants'
262  in which participants exchanged some of the money that they had earned for brief views of attractive
263 he rate of button pressing and the amount of money they earned.
264 ons were largely predictive of the amount of money they returned to the partner.
265       That is, if one just lost money or won money, this may impact future decisions.
266   Together, these results suggest that using money to buy time can protect people from the detrimenta
267               We provide evidence that using money to buy time can provide a buffer against this time
268 ldlife exceeds $2.3 billion, which is enough money to construct 155 landfills with state-of-the-art c
269 ement task for which participants could earn money to delay smoking and subsequently purchase cigaret
270  Moreover, individuals were willing to forgo money to disclose about the self.
271 cation which gave no apparent reason for the money to end up there.
272  intervention could represent good value for money to help prevent malaria in more remote areas, wher
273 nts) and 21 (21%) of 98 individuals borrowed money to pay for medications.
274 eviewed journal; to get a job in academia or money to run a lab, we present these published papers to
275 tes (6.9%-1.3%; P < .001), and spending less money to save for medications (8.0% to 3.5%; P < .001).
276 ator Game, where the 'dictator' can allocate money to the partner (the 'receiver').
277 .04, 95% CI 2.12-4.36, P < 0.001), and owing money to their practice (OR 2.71, 95% CI 1.34-5.50, P =
278 medication; skipped medication doses to save money; took less medicine to save money; delayed filling
279 dia testing and given the option of donating money toward testing for future participants.
280 ing in the pay-it-forward group donated some money toward testing for future participants.
281 etwork with applications ranging from secure money transfer to multiparty quantum computation.
282 scription drugs from another country to save money; used alternative therapies to save money.
283 y tasks involving different incentive types (money vs. social affective images) to a sample of 28 par
284  were a cost-beneficial investment of public money, warranting careful consideration by policy makers
285                       Although spending more money was associated with a healthier diet, large improv
286 on a recovered bill which indicates that the money was immersed before burial.
287 ne abusers, prefrontal cortex sensitivity to money was instead associated with motivation and self-co
288 rom summer bloom species suggesting that the money was not directly buried dry and the immersion happ
289 uninformative did not provide good value for money when compared to using AGH as first-line testing.
290 h as investing more-whether time, effort, or money-when reward is more certain.
291 es of gaining or losing different amounts of money while their brain activity was measured with funct
292                                    The prize money will be used to fund outreach activities aimed at
293 hey fail, they will lose all their remaining money with 50% probability.
294 e, a proposer suggests how to split a sum of money with a responder.
295 mble of gaining or losing the same amount of money with equal chance.
296  investment of time and energy, and possibly money, with no guarantee of finding a job or of returnin
297 ences for pain were more altruistic than for money, with several participants assigning more than hal
298 further improved LE (38.32 years), and saved money within 4 years after delivery ($5630 per mother-in
299 e world to reduce costs in terms of time and money without compromising patients outcome.
300 ome-sequencing efforts, saving both time and money without sacrificing quality.

 
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