ODISSEI (Open Data Infrastructure for Social Science and Economic Innovations)
Not a member yet
9734 research outputs found
Sort by
Comparative Analysis of Real Estate and Stock Markets as Inflation Hedges: Insights from East Asia and the US
To investigate the issue of inflation-hedging to find appropriate hedging assets against inflation by using the VAR or VECM model. We have collected data encompassing housing price indices, stock indices, price indexes, and money supply from five countries: the United States, Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan. The housing price index focuses on the transaction prices of listed residential houses in the metropolitan area as the benchmark, the stock price index is the ordinary stock market index of various countries, the price index is the consumer price index (CPI), and the money supply is M2 aggregate. The time period for obtaining data on the housing price index and stock price index is not the same
Project Ongekend Bijzonder, Den Haag, interview 46
geslacht: M
land van herkomst: Afghanistan
leeftijd aankomst NL: 53
stad: Den Haag
vluchtreden: Taliban
relaties met eigen gemeenschap: Afghaanse vereninging, veel contacten
beroep land van herkomst: leraar
kinderen: 5
bijdrage aan de stad: Actief in het culturele verenigingsleven.
opvallend/bijzonder: Organiseerde bijeenkomsten met Afghaanse vluchtelingen uit heel Europa
Project Ongekend Bijzonder, Utrecht, interview 32
geslacht: V
land van herkomst: Iran
leeftijd aankomst NL: 15
stad: Utrecht
vluchtreden: regime, veiligheid
relaties met eigen gemeenschap: niet intensief
opleiding: (interieur) architectuur
beroep land van herkomst: n.v.t.
werk in NL: Student / kunstenaar
bijdrage aan de stad:
opvallend/bijzonder: Workshops geven in AZ
Social connectedness at the playground before and after COVID-19 school closure
Social connectedness at school is crucial to children's development, yet very little is known about the way it has been affected by school closures during COVID-19 pandemic. We compared pre-post lockdown levels of social connectedness at a school playground in forty-three primary school-aged children, using wearable sensors, observations, peer nominations and self-reports
Lexical stress identification in cochlear implant-simulated speech by non-native listeners
Analysis code and data that support the findings of the experimental study reported in the article "Lexical stress identification in cochlear implant-simulated speech by non-native listeners" (see Related Publication listed below)
Utrecht corpus of speech errors
This dataset contains the "Utrecht" corpus of spontaneous speech errors and mispronunciations in Dutch. These spontaneous errors were collected "in the wild" in the years 1979-1988 by staff members and students at the Institute of Phonetics at Utrecht University, in Utrecht, the Netherlands. The dataset contains a structured corpus of 2455 annotated errors, with annotations capturing (a.o.) the type of error, direction of error, unit of error, and intended speech target of each error. For more information, see the file USPRAAK.readme.md file in this dataset
Do My Reactions Outweigh My Actions? The Relation between Reactive and Proactive Aggression with Peer Acceptance in Preschoolers
Data and materials supporting the paper "Do My Reactions Outweigh My Actions? The Relation between Reactive and Proactive Aggression with Peer Acceptance in Preschoolers"
Material for "Explaining uncertainty in women’s fertility preferences"
Here you can find the materials to (re)produce all findings, tables, and figures accompanying the article "Explaining uncertainty in women’s fertility preferences
Replication Data for: The Productivity Slowdown in Advanced Economies: Common Shocks or Common Trends?
Fernald, John, Robert Inklaar, Dimitrije Ruzic. 2024 “The Productivity Slowdown in
Advanced Economies: Common Shocks or Common Trends?” Review of Income and Wealth, forthcoming, DOI: 10.1111/roiw.12690</a
Examining the Proteus Effect in the Context of Healthy Food Choices and Intentions to Eat Healthy: The Role of Avatar Body Size, Avatar Allocation Type, and Visual Perspective
As avatars gain prominence in health-promoting applications, understanding how health-related avatar appearance characteristics could affect users’ behavior is crucial. Drawing upon the Proteus effect, avatars can positively and negatively affect health behaviors, depending on whether the avatar appearance is aligned with stereotypes about healthy or unhealthy behavior. Investigating avatar appearances is essential to understand potential negative health effects. Three experiments in a non-immersive virtual supermarket examined whether controlling an overweight avatar negatively affected 1) intentions to eat healthy and 2) food choice healthiness in the virtual supermarket, thereby investigating avatar allocation type (Study 1) and visual perspective (Study 2) as moderators. 2 (Avatar body size: overweight vs. healthy weight) by 2 (Avatar allocation type: self-assigned vs. experimenter-assigned [Study 1]; Visual perspective: first-person vs. third-person [Studies 2 and 3]) between-subjects designs were employed. None of the studies demonstrated the Proteus effect and no moderating role of avatar allocation type was found (Study 1). Unexpectedly, controlling an overweight avatar resulted in stronger intentions to eat healthy from a third-person perspective only (Study 2), which led to the hypothesis that the overweight avatar functioned as a fear stimulus. To test this, a health message was added that highlighted obesity as a health risk (Study 3). The addition of this message did not affect intentions to eat healthy and food choice healthiness. The combination of fear appeal and self-perception theory as explanatory frameworks for behavioral responses to avatars opens avenues for new research, such as exploring specific conditions that trigger each effect