211 research outputs found
Konzepte der Softwarevisualisierung für komplexe, objektorientierte Softwaresysteme
1. Grundlagen der Softwarevisualisierung Johannes Bohnet und Jürgen Döllner 2. Visualisierung und Exploration von Softwaresystemen mit dem Werkzeug SHriMP/Creole Alexander Gierak 3. Annex: SHriMP/Creole in der Anwendung Nebojsa Lazic 4. Metrikbasierte Softwarevisualisierung mit dem Reverse-Engineering-Werkzeug CodeCrawler Daniel Brinkmann 5. Annex: CodeCrawler in der Anwendung Benjamin Hagedorn 6. Quellcodezeilenbasierte Softwarevisualisierung Nebojsa Lazic 7. Landschafts- und Stadtmetaphern zur Softwarevisualisierung Benjamin Hagedorn 8. Visualisierung von Softwareevolution Michael Schöbel 9. Ergebnisse und Ausblick Johannes Bohnet Literaturverzeichnis Autorenverzeichni
Karl Barth, Erklärungen des Epheser-und des Jakobusbriefes 1919-1929. Herausgegeben von Jörg-Michael Bohnet, (Karl Barth Gesamtausgabe, 46), Zürich, Theologischer Verlag, 2009
Grappe Christian. Karl Barth, Erklärungen des Epheser-und des Jakobusbriefes 1919-1929. Herausgegeben von Jörg-Michael Bohnet, (Karl Barth Gesamtausgabe, 46), Zürich, Theologischer Verlag, 2009. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 91e année n°3, Juillet-Septembre 2011. pp. 467-468
Risky locations: refugee settlement patterns and conflict
Although constructed for safety, many refugee settlements today encounter violence, becoming risky locations for refugees and hosts. This dissertation investigates why some of these refugee settlements experience violence and not others. Heidrun Bohnet argues that the geographical location and distribution of refugees are influential factors in determining refugee-related conflict. While previous research has highlighted that refugees can become involved in new conflict situations in the host country, little comparative analysis exists that investigates the link between refugees and conflict. By using new quantitative refugee data on Africa from 1999-2010, this dissertation shows that the geographical space occupied by refugees is closely related to the risk of conflict. The author contends that a disaggregated approach towards refugees needs to be taken to understand refugee-related conflict within refugee settlements and beyond them
Repetition and Reputation: Implications for Trust and Trustworthiness When Institutions Change
Learning trust
We examine the effects of different forms of feedback information on
the performance of markets that suffer from moral hazard problems due
to sequential exchange. As orthodox theory would predict, we find that
providing buyers with information about sellers’ trading history boosts
market performance. More surprisingly, this beneficial effect of incentives
for reputation building is considerably enhanced if sellers, too, can
observe other sellers’ trading history. This suggests that two-sided market
transparency is an important ingredient for the design of well-functioning
markets that are prone to moral hazard
Maeser Elementary Class
Maeser fifth grade class. Top row- left to right- Merlin Sinfield, Gary Bohnet, Blaine Pierce, Michael Smith, Gerald Abplanalp. Bottom row- left to right Steven Hall, Arnest Atwood, Georgia Ann McCarrel, Carolyn Perry, Sue Ann Saunders, Nyla Porter, Linda Schaefermeyer
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Essays on Social Influence in Political Economy: How Expectations and Identity Affect Pro-Social Leading and Following
By social influence I understand the change in an individual’s thoughts, feelings, attitudes or behaviors that results from interactions with another individual or group. Political, commercial and public health campaigns rely at least partly on influence. Without influence, we have a hard time explaining voter turnout, fads or contagious health behaviors. In my research I focus on pro-social behavior and the de-decentralized provision of public goods, and I ask when and why people are influenced by others as well as when and why people attempt to influence others to “do the right thing”. These questions help us understand human motivation in social contexts, and thus may also help us design policies that can nudge behavior towards more socially desirable, welfare enhancing outcomes.
Despite the importance of influence, its study is scattered across disciplines. In my research, I seek to bridge the disciplinary gap through a three-pronged approach. First, I incorporate concepts found in psychology into a decision-theoretic framework. Second, I experimentally test for hypotheses that are derived from this formalization. Third, I use game theory to derive novel conclusions about how aggregate behavior changes when these concepts are incorporated and propose policy recommendations. My dissertation follows parts of this procedure and points to next steps for two psychology concepts: social identity adoption and social expectations.
In chapter 1, I write down a unifying model of social identity adoption that integrates different strands in the economics and psychology literature. I provide evidence for the main predictions of this model with a large scale field experiment on charitable giving in Mexico. In chapter 2, joint with Michael Hiscox, we write down a model from which we derive conditions for distinguishing between a social expectations and an altruism explanation to pro-social influence. Results from a laboratory experiment show that most pro-social influence is due to social expectations. In chapter 3, I integrate this social expectations model into a sequential decision setting. I use this to derive a novel model of pluralistic ignorance, and argue that this model explains why uninformed individuals can be leaders in a way past models could not.Political Economy and Governmentleadership; pro-social actions; field experiments; lab experiments; social expectations; altruism; social movements; pluralistic ignorance; Arab Spring
Does Increasing Farm Plot Size Influence the Visual Quality of Everyday Agricultural Landscapes?
The increase in farm plot size is one of the most apparent and significant trends that have influenced central and eastern European agricultural landscapes since the 1950s. In many countries where the average plot size in traditional land-use systems did not exceed several hectares, present-day plots reach the size of 200 ha or more. In recent times, efforts have been made to reverse this trend to restore important ecosystem functions and to re-establish the aesthetic values of everyday landscapes. Visual landscape quality is becoming a major driving force in the development of agricultural landscapes with known effects on people’s well-being and health, and this quality plays an increasingly important role in agricultural policies. However, no comprehensive research has been carried out to establish the links between perceived visual landscape quality and the scale of the farm plot pattern. The current study was therefore designed to determine whether greater farmland pattern heterogeneity, i.e., smaller farm plot sizes, is consistent with higher visual preferences. The results showed that people preferred a small-scale plot pattern in landscapes characterized by a flat relief and a low proportion of woody vegetation. These homogeneous landscapes were also overall considered significantly less beautiful than more diverse landscapes. However, even a moderate decrease in plot size notably improved these low beauty scores. These preferences were displayed consistently by all respondents, and most strongly by older respondents, respondents with a higher level of education, and those professionally engaged in landscape design or conservation. The high level of consensus among respondents in rejecting further land consolidation in homogeneous landscapes, which form a large proportion of European farmland, underlines that the results of this study provide a valid argument for discussing sustainable agricultural plot sizes as part of agricultural policy-making
Michael Bohnet. Geschichte der deutschen Entwicklungspolitik. Strategien, Inhalte, Zeitzeugen.
Michael Bohnet. Geschichte der deutschen Entwicklungspolitik. Strategien, Inhalte, Zeitzeugen.
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