9 results
Search Results
2. Location choice of multinational enterprises in China: Comparison between Japan and Taiwan.
- Author
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Chang, Kuo‐I, Hayakawa, Kazunobu, and Matsuura, Toshiyuki
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,BUSINESS enterprises ,INDUSTRIAL clusters - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
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3. Social engagement for mental health: An international survey of older populations.
- Author
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Yen, Hsin‐Yen, Chi, Mei‐Ju, and Huang, Hao‐Yun
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SOCIAL participation ,GENDER role ,STATISTICS ,CONFIDENCE ,CROSS-sectional method ,SOCIAL networks ,MENTAL health ,POPULATION geography ,SATISFACTION ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PHYSICAL activity ,T-test (Statistics) ,LONELINESS ,MENTAL depression ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software ,SECONDARY analysis ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,OLD age - Abstract
Background and purpose: Social engagement is an important active aging strategy to promote older adults' mental health. The purposes of this study were to compare social engagement in older populations around the world and explore associations with mental health outcomes. Materials and methods: An international cross‐sectional survey was conducted from 2017 to 2019. Data were retrieved from The International Social Survey Programme for a secondary data analysis across 30 countries. This study applied the Taxonomy of Social Activities and its six levels as operational definitions for a consistent concept of social engagement for international comparisons. Results: In total, 9403 older adults with a mean age of 72.85 ± 6.40 years responded. The highest levels of older adults' social engagement were found in Switzerland, Thailand, and New Zealand. Older adults of a higher age, with a lower educational level, who were permanently sick or disabled, who had no partner, who were widowed or whose civil partner had died, who lived alone, and who had lower self‐placement in society had significantly lower social engagement than did their counterparts. In the regression model, older adults' social engagement positively predicted general health, self‐accomplishment, and life satisfaction, but negatively predicted loneliness and depression. Conclusions: In aging societies worldwide, encouraging older adults' social engagement would be beneficial to promote mental health. Implications for nursing practice and health policies: Community professional nurses can develop strategies of social engagement based on the needs and sociodemographic factors of older adults to improve their mental health. Developing efficient strategies and local policies by learning from successful experiences in other countries is important to promote social engagement in aging societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Prevalence of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia in cognitively impaired elderly residents of long‐term care facilities in East Asia: a cross‐sectional study.
- Author
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Makimoto, Kiyoko, Kang, Younhee, Kobayashi, Sayuri, Liao, Xiao‐yan, Panuthai, Sirirat, Sung, Huei‐chuan, Suzuki, Mizue, Terada, Saya, and Yamakawa, Miyae
- Subjects
COGNITION disorders diagnosis ,DIAGNOSIS of dementia ,DEMENTIA risk factors ,DEMENTIA ,APATHY ,COGNITION disorders ,COMPARATIVE studies ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,NURSING home patients ,SURVEYS ,DISABILITIES ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the prevalence of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) in cognitively impaired elderly residents of long‐term care facilities in East Asia and to explore the factors associated with these patterns. Methods: This was a cross‐sectional survey of BPSD in cognitively impaired elderly residents of long‐term care facilities in Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan, and Thailand. The Mini‐Mental State Examination, Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR), and Neuropsychiatric Inventory, Nursing Home version (NPI‐NH), were used to assess cognitive status, dementia severity, and BPSD, respectively. NPI‐NH subscale severity scores were multiplied by frequency scores to obtain the subscale scores and aggregated into two groups based on score (clinically insignificant = 1– 3; clinically significant ≥4). Results: Data from 662 people were analyzed. Median age, median Mini‐Mental State Examination scores, and median CDR scores differed significantly among the seven study sites. The prevalence of BPSD varied from 64% in Taiwan to 100% in dementia care units in Japan, and the median total NPI‐NH scores ranged from 2 in Taiwan to 14 in dementia care units in Japan. After stratification of the sample by dementia severity and clinical significance of NPI‐NH scores, differences in the prevalence of clinically significant BPSD were mostly observed among facilities dedicated to dementia patients in the CDR 1 group. In the CDR 3 group, the prevalence of some clinically significant BPSD, such as apathy, was high even among study sites with low median total NPI‐NH scores. Conclusions: Our findings may suggest referral and selection biases in the study sites. Future prospective studies are needed to address the impact of environmental and care factors on the occurrence of BPSD in Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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5. Prevalence of dementia in East Asia: a synthetic review of time trends.
- Author
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Wu, Yu‐Tzu, Brayne, Carol, and Matthews, Fiona E.
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DEMENTIA research ,DISEASE prevalence ,POPULATION aging - Abstract
Objective This study aims to synthesise evidence on time trends of dementia prevalence in East Asian countries including Japan, China, South Korea and Taiwan and assess the impact of the societal changes on future prevalence. Method Relevant reviews and recent nationwide studies in East Asia were identified to investigate changes in prevalence of dementia over time taking into account the potential impact of methodological factors and study designs. Results The robust evidence that has been interpreted to suggest a substantial increasing trend over time is less compelling once fundamental differences in study methods and populations across individual surveys are considered. In Japan, longitudinal studies in small areas suggest the potential increase of prevalence after 2000. Increasing trends in China, South Korea and Taiwan over the last 20-30 years are based on the literature review without adjustment for methodological differences. Economic development and huge societal changes alongside the rise of non-communicable disease in East Asia could lead to increasing prevalence of dementia in the future once those cohorts with high risk of dementia reached their older age. Conclusion Current evidence is not sufficient to suggest increasing trends of dementia prevalence in East Asia. Longitudinal studies with representative samples and stable methodology are needed to provide fundamental information of the epidemiology of dementia and identify important risk factors in East Asian societies. © 2015 The Authors. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Cultural and individual differences in self-rating behavior: an extension and refinement of the cultural relativity hypothesis.
- Author
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Xie, Jia Lin, Roy, Jean-Paul, and Chen, Ziguang
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SELF-evaluation ,HYPOTHESIS ,PERSONS ,INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
This study examined the relationships between culture, individual attributes, and self-rating behavior among 1,786 university students in Canada, Hong Kong, Taiwan, mainland China, and Japan, and in doing so extended and refined the cultural relativity hypothesis. It explored the difference between vertical and horizontal individualists in self-rating behavior, and examined the mediating effects of two individual attributes, self-enhancement propensity and general self-efficacy in the relationship between individualism and self-rating behavior. The results confirmed that individualism is the cultural driver for self-rating leniency, and that the individual-level assessment of individualism is a stronger predictor of self-rating leniency than are culture-level differences. Vertical individualism was found to be positively related to self-enhancement propensity, which in turn was positively related to self-rating. Whereas, horizontal individualism was positively related to general self-efficacy, which in turn had a positive relationship with self-rating. We discuss the implications of the results for academic research and practical management. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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7. A migration analysis of the rice planthopper Nilaparvata lugens from the Philippines to East Asia with three-dimensional computer simulations.
- Author
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Otuka, Akira, Watanabe, Tomonari, Suzuki, Yoshito, Matsumura, Masaya, Furuno, Akiko, and Chino, Masamichi
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PLANTHOPPERS ,HOMOPTERA ,ANIMAL migration ,ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Migrations of the rice planthopper Nilaparvata lugens (Stål) (Delphacidae) from the Philippines to Taiwan, southern China, and southern Japan were analyzed using three-dimensional migration simulations. The results strongly suggested that the Southeast Asian population of N. lugens mixes with the East Asian population. This highlighted the possibility that planthoppers from the Southeast Asian population, which have properties different from those in the East Asian population such as feeding of resistant rice varieties and wing polymorphism, could migrate to Japan via southern China and Taiwan. This study, therefore, emphasizes the special care that should be taken to monitor the properties of immigrants to Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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8. Reactions to Authority.
- Author
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Nailin Bu, Craig, Timothy J., and Peng, T. K.
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EMPLOYEE attitudes ,ETHNOLOGY ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Compared with Japanese and Taiwanese employees, People's Republic of China (PRC) employees were more strongly influenced by company policies but less strongly influenced by independent assessment. This article reports a study that compared the extent to which reactions to supervisory authority among employees in Japan, Taiwan, and the PRC were affected by various workplace circumstantial factors. The economic reform and open-door policies implemented in the PRC since the late 1970s have, however, generated observable changes in the PRC both in terms of the spectacular growth of the economy and in terms of the improved personal freedom among its population. Empirical studies comparing the attitudes of employees across these three East Asian nations, especially between the PRC and Taiwan, are scarce in the Western management literature. The lack of in-depth understanding of the differences in work attitudes and behaviors across Japan, Taiwan, and the PRC is regrettable also because of the extensive and growing economic interactions among the three economies and the managerial challenges associated with the interactions. Because the success of a firm relies on its managers' ability to elicit and channel the work efforts of the workforce, it is of critical importance to explore the conditions affecting employees' willingness to accept managerial influence.
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- 2001
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9. Making Sense of the Asian Success Story: An Integrative Framework.
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Chow-Hou Wee and Tan, Gilbert
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ECONOMIC conditions in Asia, 1945- ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,ECONOMIC conditions in Japan, 1989- ,TAIWANESE economy, 1975- ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
The article focuses on Asian countries that have experienced economic growth over the past 50 years including Hong Kong, China; Japan; Singapore; South Korea and Taiwan. With the exception of Hong Kong, the economic success of the Asian countries has been attributed to the interventionist framework. Export-orientation is one strategy that is most associated with the success of the five Asian countries. The export-oriented strategy helped the five Asian countries in many ways. The ensuring growth of employment enabled the country to save and accumulate capital for reinvestment. The export-oriented strategy also positively affects the competitive advantages of the country. There are other non-economic factors, such as culture, the need to survive, strong government, historical factors and even luck, that could have helped in the development process of these countries. Policy-makers must know how to use the total-systems approach to solving economic problems. In other words, policy-makers must know how to analyse their economies as complex systems.
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- 1997
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