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A capability is the ability to execute a specified course of action or to achieve certain outcomes. As it applies to human capital, capability represents performing or achieving certain actions/outcomes in terms of the intersection of capacity and ability. Capability may also refer to: Engineering * Capability (systems engineering), the ability to execute a specified course of action * Capability management, integrative management function in the defense sector Computing * Capability-based addressing, scheme used by some computers to control access to memory * Capability-based security, concept in the design of secure computing systems Economics * Capability Maturity Model, a development model * Capability Maturity Model Integration, a process improvement training and appraisal program * Dynamic capabilities, theory in organizational sciences * Capability management in business, capacity, materials, and expertise an organization needs in order to perform core functions * Capab ...
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Human Capital
Human capital is a concept used by social scientists to designate personal attributes considered useful in the production process. It encompasses employee knowledge, skills, know-how, good health, and education. Human capital has a substantial impact on individual earnings. Research indicates that human capital investments have high economic returns throughout childhood and young adulthood. Companies can invest in human capital, for example, through education and training, enabling improved levels of quality and production. As a result of his conceptualization and modeling work using Human Capital as a key factor, the 2018 Nobel Prize for Economics was jointly awarded to Paul Romer, who founded the modern innovation-driven approach to understanding economic growth. In the recent literature, the new concept of task-specific human capital was coined in 2004 by Robert Gibbons, an economist at MIT, and Michael Waldman, an economist at Cornell University. The concept emphasizes ...
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Capability Brown
Lancelot Brown (born c. 1715–16, baptised 30 August 1716 – 6 February 1783), more commonly known as Capability Brown, was an English gardener and landscape architect, who remains the most famous figure in the history of the English landscape garden style. He is remembered as "the last of the great English 18th-century artists to be accorded his due" and "England's greatest gardener". Unlike other architects including William Kent, he was a hands-on gardener and provided his clients with a full turnkey service, designing the gardens and park, and then managing their landscaping and planting. He is most famous for the landscaped parks of English country houses, many of which have survived reasonably intact. However, he also included in his plans "pleasure gardens" with flower gardens and the new shrubberies, usually placed where they would not obstruct the views across the park of and from the main facades of the house. Few of his plantings of "pleasure gardens" have s ...
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Ability (other)
An ability is the power an agent has to perform various actions. Ability may also refer to: * Aptitude, a component of a competency to do a certain kind of work at a certain level * Capability (other) * Intellectual giftedness, an intellectual ability significantly higher than average * Intelligence, the ability to perceive, infer, retain or apply information * Knowledge, a familiarity with someone or something, which can include facts, information, descriptions, or skills * Potential (other) * Power (social and political), the ability to influence people or events * Skill, the learned ability to carry out a task with pre-determined results * Superpower (ability), a popular culture term for a fictional superhuman ability Ships * ''Ability'' (1878), Australian ketch * ''Ability'' (1910), Australian steamer Other * Ability score, in role-playing games * Ability Plus Software, makers of the office suite Ability Office * Ability grouping * ''Ability'' (magazi ...
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Capable Group
In mathematics, in the realm of group theory, a group is said to be capable if it occurs as the inner automorphism group of some group. These groups were first studied by Reinhold Baer, who showed that a finite abelian group In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is commut ... is capable if and only if it is a product of cyclic groups of orders ''n''1,...,''n''''k'' where ''n''''i'' divides ''n''''i''+1 and ''n''''k''–1=''n''''k''. References * External links Bounds on the index of the center in capable groups Properties of groups {{Abstract-algebra-stub ...
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USS Capable
Two ships of the United States Navy The United States Navy (USN) is the maritime service branch of the United States Armed Forces and one of the eight uniformed services of the United States. It is the largest and most powerful navy in the world, with the estimated tonnage ... have been named ''Capable''. * , was a minesweeper launched 16 November 1942, and commissioned 5 December 1943. ''Capable'' was decommissioned 16 August 1945 and transferred to the Soviet Union under lend-lease. * , is an Ocean Surveillance Ship, launched on 28 October 1988. {{DEFAULTSORT:Capable United States Navy ship names ...
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Incapable (Róisín Murphy Song)
A capability is the ability to execute a specified course of action or to achieve certain outcomes. As it applies to human capital, capability represents performing or achieving certain actions/outcomes in terms of the intersection of capacity and ability. Capability may also refer to: Engineering * Capability (systems engineering), the ability to execute a specified course of action * Capability management, integrative management function in the defense sector Computing * Capability-based addressing, scheme used by some computers to control access to memory * Capability-based security, concept in the design of secure computing systems Economics * Capability Maturity Model, a development model * Capability Maturity Model Integration, a process improvement training and appraisal program * Dynamic capabilities, theory in organizational sciences * Capability management in business, capacity, materials, and expertise an organization needs in order to perform core functions * Capab ...
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Incapable (Julie Bergan Song)
Julie Bergan (born 12 April 1994) is a Norwegian singer and songwriter born in Skien, Norway. Bergan started releasing covers on YouTube at the age of 16, eventually signing a record deal with Warner Music Norway in 2013. In 2015 she attained mainstream success with her single ''All Hours'', crossing borders to Denmark and Germany, before breaking though in her native Norway in 2016 with ''Arigato'' peaking at number one''.'' Bergans major-label debut album ''Turn on the Light'' was released in 2018. She returned to the number one spot in 2018 on VG-lista after collaborating with K-391, Alan Walker and Seungri on "Ignite". Career In 2012 she recorded the song "Supernova" with Cir.Cuz, which peaked at number five on the Norwegian Singles Chart. She participated in Melodi Grand Prix 2013, the national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 with the song "Give a Little Something Back", which she wrote with Ben Adams and Sara Skjoldnes. She did not qualify from the semi-f ...
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Capability Development Group
The Chief of Capability Development Group (CCDG) was head of the Capability Development Group (CDG) in the Australian Department of Defence, part of the Australian Defence Organisation. This position was created in December 2003 and disbanded through the amalgamation of the Capability Development Group and the Defence Materiel Organisation into the Defence Capability Acquisition and Sustainment Group from 2015. The appointed officer was responsible to the diarchy of the Chief of the Defence Force and the Secretary of Defence. Capability Development Group The role of the Capability Development Group (CDG) was to develop and gain Australian Government approval for future defence capabilities. The CDG has a close relationship with the Defence Materiel Organisation) and oversaw the implementation of Defence Procurement Review recommendations. As sponsor, CDG was responsible for developing capability proposals consistent with strategic priorities, funding guidance, legislation an ...
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Capability Approach
The capability approach (also referred to as the capabilities approach) is a normative approach to human welfare that concentrates on the actual capability of persons to achieve lives they value rather than solely having a right or freedom to do so. It was conceived in the 1980s as an alternative approach to welfare economics. In this approach, Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum combine a range of ideas that were previously excluded from (or inadequately formulated in) traditional approaches to welfare economics. The core focus of the capability approach is improving access to the tools people use to live a fulfilling life. Assessing capability Sen initially argued for five components to assess capability: # The importance of real freedoms in the assessment of a person's advantage # Individual differences in the ability to transform resources into valuable activities # The multi-variate nature of activities giving rise to wellbeing # A balance of materialistic and nonmaterialistic ...
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Capability (systems Engineering)
A capability, in the systems engineering sense, is defined as the ability to execute a specified course of action. A capability may or may not be accompanied by an intention. The term is used in the defense industry but also in private industry (e.g. gap analysis). Capability gap analysis The Joint Capabilities Integration Development System is an important part of DoD military planning. The "Operation of the JCIDS" introduces a Capability Based Analysis (CBA) process that includes identification of capability gaps. In essence, a Capability Gap Analysis is the determination of needed capabilities that do not yet exist. The Department of Defense Architecture Framework (DoDAF) suggests the use of the Operational Activity Model (OV-5) in conducting a CGA."Department of Defense Architecture Framework", Version 1.5, Volume 2, Department of Defense, 15 August 200/ref> See also * Capability Management * Operational Activity Model (OV-5) * Operational Event-Trace Description (OV ...
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Capability Management In Business
Capability management is the approach to the management of an organization, typically a business organization or firm, based on the "theory of the firm" as a collection of capabilities that may be exercised to earn revenues in the marketplace and compete with other firms in the industry. Capability management seeks to manage the stock of capabilities within the firm to ensure its position in the industry and its ongoing profitability and survival. Prior to the emergence of capability management, the dominant theory explaining the existence and competitive position of firms, based on Ricardian economics, was the resource-based view of the firm (RBVF). The fundamental thesis of this theory is that firms derive their profitability from their control of resources – and are in competition to secure control of resources. Perhaps the best-known exposition of the Resource-based View of the Firm is that of one of its key originators: economist Edith Penrose. "Capability management" may ...
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Dynamic Capabilities
In organizational theory, dynamic capability is the capability of an organization to purposefully adapt an organization's resource base. The concept was defined by David Teece, Gary Pisano and Amy Shuen, in their 1997 paper ''Dynamic Capabilities and Strategic Management'', as "the firm’s ability to integrate, build, and reconfigure internal and external competences to address rapidly changing environments". The term is often used in the plural form, dynamic capabilities, emphasizing that the ability to react adequately and timely to external changes requires a combination of multiple capabilities. Overview The phrase "dynamic capabilities" was introduced in a working paper by David Teece, Gary Pisano, and Amy Shuen. The final, peer-reviewed version was published in 1997. The idea of dynamic capabilities is similar in some ways to the previously existing concept of operational capabilities; the latter pertains to the current operations of an organization, whereas the former, by ...
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