Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Mohring effect

The Mohring aftereffect is a abstruse acreage of alteration systems demonstrating accretion returns.

In brief, as alteration frequencies increase, adjournment times decrease, appeal increases, and alteration frequencies can access again. This is because alteration schedules action over time. If there is one bus an hour, the boilerplate adjournment from the adapted time of abandonment (or agenda delay) is 30 minutes, if there are two buses an hour, the agenda adjournment drops to 15 account and so on. So the attendance of an added user increases the likelihood of added account actuality provided.

The aftereffect was called for University of Minnesota economist Herbert Mohring, who articular this acreage in a 1972 paper.

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