1,476 research outputs found
How to reap the benefits of flexible work time
The golden strategy may be to use flextime only occasionally when really needed, write Ines Spieler, Susanne Scheibe, Christian Stamov Roßnagel and Arvid Kappa
sj-pdf-1-dem-10.1177_14713012221083392 – Supplemental Material for From dementia mindsets to emotions and behaviors: Predicting person-centered care in care professionals
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-dem-10.1177_14713012221083392 for From dementia mindsets to emotions and behaviors: Predicting person-centered care in care professionals by Lena K Kunz, Susanne Scheibe, Barbara Wisse, Kathrin Boerner and Claudia Zemlin in Dementia</p
Supplemental Material, Supplement_1_S.P.Roth - Growth Factor-Mediated Tenogenic Induction of Multipotent Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Is Altered by the Microenvironment of Tendon Matrix
Supplemental Material, Supplement_1_S.P.Roth for Growth Factor-Mediated Tenogenic Induction of Multipotent Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Is Altered by the Microenvironment of Tendon Matrix by Susanne Pauline Roth, Susanna Schubert, Patrick Scheibe, Claudia Groß, Walter Brehm, and Janina Burk in Cell Transplantation</p
Continuous and Step-level Pay-off Functions in Public Good Games: A Conceptual Analysis
Conflicts between individuals’ and collective interests are ubiquitous in social life. Numerous experimental studies have investigated the resolution of such conflicts using public good games with either continuous or step-level payoff functions. A conceptual analysis using both classic game theory and social exchange theory shows that these two types of games are fundamentally different. A continuous function game is a social dilemma in that it contains a conflict between individual and collective interests whereas a step-level game is primarily a social coordination game. Thus, we conclude that one can not safely generalize results from step-level to continuous form games. Additionally, our analysis shows that the distinction between continuous and single-step games can be blurred by segmenting a continuous function into steps or adding steps to a single-step game. We identify characteristics of the payoff function that conceptually mark the transition from a dilemma to a coordination problem.
Letter from Susanne [Freitas] to the Okine Family, October 29, 1947
Thank you note from Susanne Freitas in San Juan Bautista, California, for the chrysanthemum flowers that the Okine's sent to her. She also mentions that she put the flowers on Mrs. Freitas' grave.The Okine Collection contains materials collected by Seiichi and Tomeyo Okine who were Issei flower growers in Whittier, California. It includes correspondence, photographs, financial documents, and a photo album. A large portion of the collection consists of family correspondence with Seiichi and Tomeyo Okine, including letters from their Nisei children, Masao and Makoto Okine, both soldiers overseas during World War II, to their Issei parents incarcerated in the Rohwer incarceration camp in McGehee, Arkansas. The correspondence also includes letters from their relatives and friends who are former incarcerees in the camps during the war and have “resettled” in Chicago, Illinois as well as letters from the Okines’ family members in Hiroshima, Japan during the Allied occupation of Japan. In addition, the collection includes a family photo album compiled by Dorothy Ai Aoki, a Nisei daughter to the Okines
Technical report: Development and validation of Dutch film stimuli to assess empathy in the work context
Empathy predicts a number of important work outcomes and is best assessed in vivo, for instance, by using controlled multi-modal, dynamic stimuli. In past work (Wieck, Scheibe, & Kunzmann, 2022; Behavior Research Methods), we introduced a newly developed set of 26 emotion-eliciting German-language film clips that can be used to assess both cognitive (emotion perception) and affective (emotional congruence and sympathy) facets of empathy. Here, we report the development of 25 Dutch-language film clips using the same methodology as in Wieck et al.(2022). Based on the relived emotions paradigm, protagonists thought-aloud about a past positive or negative work event in the laboratory and subsequently provided ratings of their emotional experience during retelling. In a validation study, N= 178 Dutch employed participants watched the film clips and provided ratings of the protagonists’ and their own emotional experience while viewing the clips. These ratings were used to calculate indices of emotional potency, empathic accuracy, emotional congruence, and sympathy. With these films, we provide Dutch dynamic, multimodal stimuli to assess empathy in vivo in (organizational) psychological research
Aging and work: The role of emotional factors and competencies
Across the globe, workforces are aging. In organizations, these demographic trends are often perceived as threats to organizational effectiveness. Are such fears justified? Older workers certainly face physical and cognitive challenges, but they also have strengths in emotional functioning; these deserve more research attention. This symposium examines age differences in workers’ emotional experiences and competencies and links these with indicators of well-being and performance. Going beyond average age affects, the five papers draw attention to contextual and individual difference factors that modulate age differences. Scheibe and Moghimi report on a diary study suggesting adaptive shifts in emotion regulation strategies with age as a function of contextual factors such as emotional intensity. Yeung and colleagues report an experimental study on age differences in emotional and behavioral reactions to workplace conflicts, also exploring the role of context. Peng and colleagues collected cross-sectional field data from a large sample of employees and found that older workers appear to be more resilient towards abusive supervision than young workers through higher levels of reappraisal. Toomey and Rudolph focus on daily expressions of empathy in an experience-sampling study; they found older workers to show more stable and increasing empathy across the week through political skills (a personal resource). Finally, Reh and colleagues examine the long-term development of emotional functioning of workers, posing the question how occupational role demands shape trajectories of emotional aging. Overall, the studies provide support for the emotional strengths of an aging workforce and identify their mechanisms and facilitating factors
Susanne M. Hoffmann discourse on observing the moon
The process of observing the moon becomes one of the important things to do. Especially in the process determining from the beginning of month kamariyah or often referred as rukyatul hilal. Where is a challenge for the observers to see a very thin moon, moreover with weather conditions that are not always bright? In addition, observing the moon at the time of eclipse can increase the faith in understanding the signs and power of Allah SWT. With regard to the presence of Susanne M. Hoffmann at Islamic Astronomy Master Program Walisongo State Islamic University, the author is very interested in examining her thoughts about observing the moon. Susanne M. Hoffmann is an expert astronomist in the history of science, physics, and didactics. She expressed the bad condition of the sky and the air in Semarang. In addition, Susanne M. Hoffmann also suggested repeating Al-Biruni observation.
This study aims to find out Susanne M. Hoffmann discourse related observing the moon and to know her suggestion to repeat Al-Biruni observation on measuring the distance between two cities. This research includes for qualitative research and includes the type of library research. Primary data is taken from in-depth interviews and documentation of Susanne M. Hoffmann’s writings, works, and photographs. While the secondary data obtained from the documentation of books, journals, and articles of others work related to research. Meanwhile, to study of Susanne M. Hoffmann discourse author uses descriptive analysis method.
The results show, that Susanne M. Hofmann discourse in observing the moon is divided into two lines. First, in response to the poor condition of the sky and air in Indonesia, or Semarang in particular, Susanne M. Hoffmann still recommends doing rukyatul hilal. Furthermore, rukyatul hilal is best to do with the naked eye than using a telescope or optical instrument. Second, about the lunar eclipse, in accordance with the field, she mastered the history of Science. Susanne M. Hoffmann was succeeding to repeat the Al-Biruni observation in measuring the distance of two cities by the lunar eclipse
GENE TECHNOLOGY AND ECONOMY
Ch. 1. Gene technology and economy / Susanne Lundin & Lynn Åkesson -- Ch. 2. Genetic engineering and economics: a challenge to north-south inequalities / Göte Hansson -- Ch. 3. Medical databases: the Icelandic case / Gísli Pádlsson -- Ch. 4. The commercialization of genes: a patent on breast cancer genes as a pilot case / Håkan Olsson -- Ch. 5. Are european patents an obstacle to Swedish cancer research? / Hans Henrik Lidgard -- Ch. 6. Bioeconomics: between persons and things / Lynn Åkesson -- Ch. 7. Plant breeder's rights or patents? / Arnulf Merker -- Ch. 8. The value of life / Stellan Welin -- Ch. 9. The government of genetic knowledge / Lene Koch -- Ch. 10. The body is worth investing in / Susanne Lundin -- About the author
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