17 results
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2. Origin of car enthusiasm and alternative paths in history.
- Author
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Bladh, Mats
- Subjects
INTERNAL combustion engines ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENTHUSIASM - Abstract
• Introducing "forks" and "links" as framework. • The desire for individual mobility was decisive. • Battery technology was a reverse salient. • Ethanol could have been the fuel for the internal combustion engine car. How can we explain the formidable success of the car all over the world? It is suggested here that the historical origin is key to the root of this enthusiasm. From a climate change mitigation perspective car culture is a difficult problem, but why is that so? This paper presents a framework of interpretation based on the literature of the birth of the American car culture about one hundred years ago. Agency, not the least on the part of the user, technological choice, and industrial links are emphasized and put together in a framework called "forks and links". This framework is tested as a narrative in the second part of the paper. It is argued that the car belongs to a product category with which active users can change their lives, while fuel and propulsion is just an input. A desired capacity for touring was decisive in the choice between gasoline and electric cars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Listening to locals: Regional spaces in higher education in the global south.
- Author
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Chankseliani, Maia and Sopromadze, Natia
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *ENTHUSIASM - Abstract
• This paper explores a contemporary trend of developing regional spaces in higher education, transcending national boundaries and promoting cross-border integration. • Using original data from the survey of 87 university international officers and interviews with seven policy-makers, this study charts the regional spaces in higher education in the Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia) and Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan). • The findings unveil a complex landscape of spatial identities marked by diversity and tensions. Various spaces, such as the European space, Eurasian Space, and commonwealth of independent States' Space, play significant roles, albeit to varying degrees across countries. • The European space is recognised as the most important space in higher education, highlighting its influence and relevance. • The study also observes the nascent development of immediate geographic spaces in central Asia and the Caucasus, where respondents express enthusiasm for collaborative efforts with neighbouring countries to advance common interests in higher education and research. One of the contemporary trends in global higher education is the emergence of regional spaces that transcend national boundaries, fostering cross-border integration and cooperation. This paper presents original data from surveys of university international officers and interviews with national policy-makers to explore regional spaces in higher education across the Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia) and Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan). The findings unveil a complex landscape of spatial identities marked by diversity and tensions. The European space is recognised as by far the most important space in higher education. At the same time, the Eurasian/the Commonwealth of Independent States' space(s) remain to be prominent in higher education, albeit to a varying degree in different countries. The study also observes the nascent development of immediate geographic spaces in Central Asia and the Caucasus, where participants express enthusiasm for collaborative efforts with neighbouring countries to advance common interests in higher education and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessing the quality of collaboration in transdisciplinary sustainability research: Farmers' enthusiasm to work together for the reduction of post-harvest dairy losses in Kenya.
- Author
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Restrepo, Maria J., Lelea, Margareta A., and Kaufmann, Brigitte A.
- Subjects
SELF-determination theory ,INTRINSIC motivation ,ENTHUSIASM ,DEVELOPING countries ,DAIRY processing ,GLOBAL North-South divide - Abstract
• Assessing quality of collaboration strengthens the TDR process and outcomes. • Methods used in TDR should enhance the enthusiasm of societal stakeholders to actively engage in the collaboration. • Satisfying societal stakeholders' needs for autonomy, competence and relatedness is critical. • Active engagement increases the ability of societal stakeholders to address sustainability challenges and to enact change. • Fostering intrinsic motivation for engagement broadens societal impacts. Transdisciplinary sustainability research (TDR) is characterised by methodologies that support a rich and direct interaction between academics and other societal stakeholders. However, it is not to be taken for granted that societal stakeholders are interested in collaboration, or that researchers have the skills to put participative methods into action. While there are several frameworks available to evaluate transdisciplinary research, the quality of participants' engagement is often neglected during evaluations. The aim of this paper is to empirically assess the intrinsic motivation of participating societal stakeholders to engage in TDR by pairing Self-Determination Theory with Poggi's conceptual analysis of enthusiasm. We argue that the quality of collaboration between academic and other societal stakeholders is reflected by the latter's enthusiasm to participate, and that this supports the co-creation of outputs that societal stakeholders can put into practice. Two smallholder dairy farmer groups in Nakuru County, Kenya, reflected on their engagement in a collaborative learning process (CLP) that started in 2013. The goal of the collaboration was to co-develop contextualized innovations. We found that giving more voice and increasing representation and power of farmers in the research process sparked their enthusiasm, while a sense of progress and success sustained it. The strengthened sense of autonomy, competence and relatedness associated with intrinsic motivation helped participants invest in co-creating research outputs that have direct effects on their production systems. Especially for agricultural research for development spanning between Global North and Global South contexts, sensitivity to encouraging participants' intrinsic motivation can contribute towards decolonizing research methodologies and shifting more power towards the societal stakeholders that these projects are meant to serve. We conclude that assessing participants' intrinsic motivation and enthusiasm helps to determine the quality of collaboration. A possible implication could also be the differentiation between methodological approaches employed in TDR that deeply engage societal stakeholders for knowledge integration and co-production, and those that do so only at a superficial level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Addressing the anti-vaccination movement and the role of HCWs.
- Author
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Tafuri, S., Gallone, M.S., Cappelli, M.G., Martinelli, D., Prato, R., and Germinario, C.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL personnel , *ANTI-vaccination movement , *PUBLIC opinion on vaccination , *LIFESTYLES & health , *HYGIENE , *ENTHUSIASM - Abstract
Over the last two decades, growing numbers of parents in the industrialized world are choosing not to have their children vaccinated. Trying to explain why this is occurring, public health commentators refer to the activities of an anti-vaccination movement. The aim of this paper is to review the literature about the anti-vaccination movements and to highlight the knowledge and the skills needed for HCWs to fight against their ideas. The main theoretical structures of anti-vaccination ideology in the 19th and 20th centuries are: vaccines cause idiopathic illness; opponents against vaccines accused vaccine partisans to be afraid of the “search after truth,” they fear unveiling errors; the vaccination law not only insults every subject of the realm, but also it insults every human being; vaccine immunity is temporary; an alternative healthy lifestyle, personal hygiene and diet stop diseases. Proponents against vaccination now have additional means to communicate their positions to the general public, the Internet in particular. Doctors and HCWs constantly have to face parents and patients who search information about vaccination. A lot of these people have previously found data about vaccinations from a lot of sources, such as papers, media or in websites and in these sources most contents come from anti-vaccine movements. For these reasons doctors and HCWs need to have updated knowledge about the vaccinations and to know the contents proposed by vaccine sceptics. Educating the general public cannot be fully effective unless there is a corresponding provision, enthusiasm and commitment by trained HCWs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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6. Native plant enthusiasm reaches new heights: Perceptions, evidence, and the future of green roofs.
- Author
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Butler, Colleen, Butler, Erin, and Orians, Colin M.
- Subjects
NATIVE plants ,GREEN roofs ,ENTHUSIASM ,SENSORY perception ,INTERIOR landscaping - Abstract
Abstract: The use of native plants on green roofs has attracted considerable attention in recent years. With this comes the implicit assumptions that native plants are better adapted, provide greater environmental benefit, and are more aesthetically pleasing than non-native plants. We examined papers published in scholarly journals and papers presented at the annual North American green roof conference to identify who is promoting the use of native plants on green roofs, their rationale for doing so, and the scientific evidence to support the assertion that natives are better adapted. Architects, landscape architects, and biologists were the most likely to promote native plants and engineers were the least likely. Many of the reasons for using native plants on green roofs originate from ground-level landscaping and have simply been transplanted to the roof, without regard for the fact that the rooftop is a fundamentally different environment than the ground. Nearly half of all pro-native papers used the term “native” without definition. This review highlights the need for greater rigor and transparency when promoting the use of native plants and further demonstrates how misconceptions can result in sub-optimal green roof design and performance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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7. Towards the development of a technology for art therapy and dementia: Definition of needs and design constraints
- Author
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Mihailidis, Alex, Blunsden, Scott, Boger, Jennifer, Richards, Brandi, Zutis, Krists, Young, Laurel, and Hoey, Jesse
- Subjects
- *
ART therapy , *ASSISTIVE technology , *DEMENTIA , *QUALITY of life , *ENTHUSIASM , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
Abstract: Art therapy is a growing field of interest in the care and maintenance of quality of life for persons with dementia. This paper describes research that had arts therapists participate in the identification of desirable features and functionalities of a computer-based tool for use in arts therapy with older adults who have dementia. The study targets the needs of art therapists and their clients, with the eventual aim of creating devices or software tools that will enhance art therapists’ work with persons who have dementia. This paper describes the first two phases of the study: a multi-national survey, and the development of prototype devices based on the survey''s results. First, results from the survey of creative arts therapists are presented along with an analysis of needs, practices, and ideas about technology. The paper then presents the three prototypes of potential art therapy technologies that were developed based on the findings from the survey. This research shows both a need for technological solutions in the domain of art therapy for persons with dementia, as well as a general acceptance and enthusiasm for technology as a clinical tool for practicing creative arts therapies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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8. Feedback driven message spreading on network.
- Author
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Nian, Fuzhong and Liu, Jinshuo
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL change , *SOCIAL structure , *PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
• A feedback-driven model of message propagation based on the classical SIR model is proposed. • The feedback mechanism affects the structure of the social network, making the network nodes more closely connected. • The level of trust between strangers is one of the most important factors affecting the spread of messages. This paper focuses on the role of feedback mechanism on message propagation. In this paper, we study the effect of feedback on message propagation in terms of both the motivation of the communicator to propagate the message and the trust of the message recipient in the communicator, and we design a decay mechanism of motivation based on Newton's cooling law. Based on these considerations, we propose a model of message propagation based on the feedback mechanism. We verify the effect of feedback on message propagation by performing numerical simulations in the Watts-Strogatz (WS) and Barabasi-Albert (BA) networks. The simulation results show that the feedback mechanism leads to faster and more persistent message propagation and that the degree of influence on message propagation varies across different network structures. The simulation also results show that the feedback mechanism changes the structure of the social network and makes the nodes between the networks more closely connected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Engagement factors for waste sorting in China: The mediating effect of satisfaction.
- Author
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Wang, Qinglin, Long, Xingle, Li, Liang, Kong, Lanlan, Zhu, Xun, and Liang, Hui
- Subjects
- *
CUSTOMER satisfaction , *SATISFACTION , *SOCIAL participation , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *CUSTOMER loyalty - Abstract
Factors promoting satisfaction and engagement with waste sorting were investigated. An extended theoretical model was established by integrating the theories of consumer satisfaction and customer engagement, rather than customer loyalty. Full replies to 672 valid questionnaires were obtained from respondents in 31 Chinese provinces. This paper explored how the perceived value of waste sorting, sorting facilities, income, age, and education affect waste sorting satisfaction. This paper also analyzed the effect of satisfaction on engagement in terms of enthusiasm, social interaction, and active participation by region and gender using multiple-group structural equation modeling (SEM). The results revealed perceived value of sorting and good sorting facilities can enhance satisfaction. Satisfaction can enhance enthusiasm, social interaction, and active participation. Education level, income and age would influence satisfaction and three dimensions of engagement: enthusiasm, social interaction and active participation. Waste sorting satisfaction affected enthusiasm, social interaction, active participation to a greater extent in eastern versus middle and western regions of China. It is important to provide market-incentives, such as green points reward, deposit refund, to promote household waste sorting. Image 1 • Education has the highest effect on enthusiasm (coefficient of 0.132) for males. • Facility has the highest positive impact on satisfaction for both genders. • Satisfaction positively impacts enthusiasm, social interaction and participation. • Income can enhance engagement of waste sorting for both genders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. We can all get along: The alignment of driver and bicyclist roadway design preferences in the San Francisco Bay Area.
- Author
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Sanders, Rebecca L.
- Subjects
- *
ROAD construction , *CYCLISTS , *ENTHUSIASM , *BICYCLE lanes , *SAFETY - Abstract
Two trends in the United States—growth in bicycling and enthusiasm for complete streets—suggest a need to understand how various roadway users view roadway designs meant to accommodate multiple modes. While many studies have examined bicyclists’ roadway design preferences, there has been little investigation into the opinions of non-bicyclists who might bicycle in the future. Additionally, little research has explored the preferences of the motorists who share roads with cyclists—despite the fact that motorists compose the vast majority of roadway users in the United States and similarly developed countries. This paper presents results from an internet survey examining perceived comfort while driving and bicycling on various roadways among 265 non-bicycling drivers, bicycling drivers, and non-driving bicyclists in the San Francisco Bay Area. Analysis of variance tests revealed that both drivers and bicyclists are more comfortable on roadways with separated bicycling facilities than those with shared space. In particular, roadways with barrier-separated bicycle lanes were the most popular among all groups, regardless of bicycling frequency. Striped bicycle lanes, a common treatment in the United States, received mixed reviews: a majority of the sample believed that they benefit cyclists and drivers through predictability and legitimacy on the roadway, but the lanes were rated significantly less comfortable than barrier-separated treatments—particularly among potential bicyclists. These findings corroborate research on bicyclists’ preferences for roadway design and contribute a new understanding of motorists’ preferences. They also support the U.S. Federal Highway Administration’s efforts to encourage greater accommodation of bicyclists on urban streets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Residents' perceptions of wine tourism development.
- Author
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Xu, Shuangyu, Barbieri, Carla, Anderson, Dorothy, Leung, Yu-Fai, and Rozier-Rich, Samantha
- Subjects
WINE tourism ,RESIDENTS ,ENTHUSIASM ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Wine trails have been studied insufficiently within the tourism literature despite of their recent rapid development worldwide. In response, this study examines residents' perceptions of wine tourism development in terms of personal benefits and community impacts. It also explores whether residents' socio-demographics and levels of wine enthusiasm, and wine trails' tourism characterization influence residents' perceptions. Following a stratified random sampling procedure, residents living along two wine trails in the Piedmont region of North Carolina (U.S.) were surveyed. Results indicate that residents are neutral in their perceptions of the Piedmont wineries in terms of both personal benefits and community impacts. Residents' socio-demographics and level of wine enthusiasm, as well as the comprehensiveness of wine trails' tourism amenities were significantly associated with residents' perceptions. Results also indicate that personal benefits mediate residents' perceptions of community impacts. In addition to the oretical and methodological contributions, this paper outlines management implications for wine trails. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Impact of an augmented reality system on students' motivation for a visual art course.
- Author
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Di Serio, Ángela, Ibáñez, María Blanca, and Kloos, Carlos Delgado
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC motivation , *CLASSROOM environment , *AUGMENTED reality , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *TEACHING aids , *ENTHUSIASM - Abstract
Abstract: In this paper, the authors show that augmented reality technology has a positive impact on the motivation of middle-school students. The Instructional Materials Motivation Survey (IMMS) (Keller, 2010) based on the ARCS motivation model (Keller, 1987a) was used to gather information; it considers four motivational factors: attention, relevance, confidence, and satisfaction. Motivational factors of attention and satisfaction in an augmented-reality-based learning environment were better rated than those obtained in a slides-based learning environment. When the impact of the augmented reality system was analyzed in isolation, the attention and confidence factors were the best rated. The usability study showed that although this technology is not mature enough to be used massively in education, enthusiasm of middle-school students diminished most of the barriers found. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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13. Vygotsky’s Crisis: Argument, context, relevance
- Author
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Hyman, Ludmila
- Subjects
- *
ARGUMENT , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PHILOSOPHY , *ENTHUSIASM , *SOCIALISM , *HUMANISTS , *TELEOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Vygotsky’s The Historical Significance of the Crisis in Psychology (1926–1927) is an important text in the history and philosophy of psychology that has only become available to scholars in 1982 in Russian, and in 1997 in English. The goal of this paper is to introduce Vygotsky’s conception of psychology to a wider audience. I argue that Vygotsky’s argument about the “crisis” in psychology and its resolution can be fully understood only in the context of his social and political thinking. Vygotsky shared the enthusiasm, widespread among Russian leftist intelligentsia in the 1920s, that Soviet society had launched an unprecedented social experiment: The socialist revolution opened the way for establishing social conditions that would let the individual flourish. For Vygotsky, this meant that “a new man” of the future would become “the first and only species in biology that would create itself.” He envisioned psychology as a science that would serve this humanist teleology. I propose that The Crisis is relevant today insofar as it helps us define a fundamental problem: How can we systematically account for the development of knowledge in psychology? I evaluate how Vygotsky addresses this problem as a historian of the crisis. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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14. Research on Profits Allocation Mechanism of Dynamic Alliance of Development Projects in Real Estate Industry.
- Author
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Yuncui, Fan and Gang, Hao
- Subjects
PROFIT ,ECONOMIC development projects ,REAL estate business ,TRANSACTION costs ,ENTHUSIASM ,CORE competencies - Abstract
Abstract: Forming the dynamic alliance of development projects in real estate industry is an effective scheme of answering changeful environment pressure. The paper defines the concept and characteristics of dynamic alliance of development projects of real estate based on the former researches, analyses the forming motive from the three angles of resource dependence, transaction cost and core competency, build the profits allocation model of dynamic alliance about development projects of real estate based on the method of Shapley, which can arouse the enthusiasm of real estate developer to form dynamic alliance and be benefit to the stable development of dynamic alliance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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15. Introducing synchronous e-discussion tools in co-located classrooms: A study on the experiences of ‘active’ and ‘silent’ secondary school students
- Author
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Asterhan, Christa S.C. and Eisenmann, Tammy
- Subjects
- *
INTERNET forums , *FACE-to-face communication , *SECONDARY education , *CLASSROOMS , *TELEMATICS , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *ENTHUSIASM , *SOCIAL interaction , *STUDENTS - Abstract
Abstract: Even though the advantages of online discussions over face-to-face discussion formats have been extensively discussed and investigated, the blending of synchronous online discussion tools in co-located classroom settings has been considered with far less intensity. In this paper, we report on secondary school students’ experiences and preferences concerning two different discussion formats for critical debate in co-located classroom settings: face-to-face and synchronous, computer-mediated communication (CMC). Data was collected with the help of self-report questionnaires (N =70) and structured interviews (N =4). A differentiation was made between students that define themselves as active participants in face-to-face classroom discussions and those who usually remain silent in these settings. The findings highlight several potential advantages of the computer-mediated discussion format, especially in terms of the social-interactive and managerial aspects of classroom discussions. Comparisons between the two groups show that ‘silent’ students welcome the introduction of CMC with enthusiasm, whereas ‘active’ students do not show a clear preference. Practical implications as well as new directions for further research are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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16. Validation par analyse factorielle du Big Five Inventory français (BFI-Fr). Analyse convergente avec le NEO-PI-R
- Author
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Plaisant, O., Courtois, R., Réveillère, C., Mendelsohn, G.A., and John, O.P.
- Subjects
- *
FACTOR analysis , *PERSONALITY , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *EXTRAVERSION , *ENTHUSIASM , *ANXIETY , *CROSS-cultural studies - Abstract
Abstract: Background: After five decades of research, an initial consensus on a general taxonomy of personality traits, the “Big Five” personality dimensions, is nowadays largely accepted. These dimensions do not represent a particular theoretical perspective but were derived from factor analyses of the natural-language terms people use to describe themselves and others. The Big Five Inventory (BFI) does not use single adjectives as items because such items are answered less consistently than when they are accompanied by definitions or elaboration. It uses 44 short phrases based on the trait adjectives known to be prototypical markers of the Big Five. The Big Five have been most typically labeled E (Extraversion, Energy, Enthusiasm), A (Agreeableness, Altruism, Affection), C (Conscientiousness, Constraint, Control of impulse), N (Neuroticism, Negative affectivity, Nervousness), and O (Openness, Originality, Open-mindedness). The BFI has been translated and validated in different languages. The development was done in such a way that they resembled as closely as possible the original English version, both in psychological meanings and psychometric properties. Objectives: The goal of this paper is to present the validation process of the French BFI (BFI-Fr) on a large student sample to verify psychometric properties, including factor structure and internal reliability and to show that the scales possess the necessary convergent and discriminant validity with the NEO personality inventory, revised (NEO-PI-R). Study 1: Internal consistency and intercultural comparison. Materials and method: Two thousand four hundred and ninety-nine students were included (women 69%; mean age 20.2 years old, S.D.=2.21, between 15 and 46 years). The 45 items of the BFI-Fr were filled out anonymously by the students at the university. Results and discussion: A factorial analysis using principal components was performed on the student answers (raw data) and resulted in a five-factor varimax-rotated solution that was easily verified as the expected five dimensions E, A, C, N, and O, which explained 42% of the total variance. Cronbach''s alpha coefficients which measure the internal coherence were respectively: 0.82, 0.75, 0.80, 0.82, and 0.74. This factorial analysis represents a very good replication of the American BFI. The mean internal consistency (0.79) is excellent, providing clear evidence of the psychometric qualities of the tool (internal validity). Normality of the distribution factors was verified before comparing the scores of French students with those of American and Spanish students. Mean scores and standard deviations were very similar in the three countries. As in previous research, gender differences in personality were found: females had higher scores (p <0.001) for N, A, and C. Study 2: convergent and discriminant validation with the NEO-PI-R. The goal of study 2 was to compare the BFI-Fr with the NEO-PI-R. Materials and method: Three hundred and sixty students (women 55%, mean age 21.1 years, S.D.=2.30, between 18.3 and 45.5) were included. In the same session, they completed both the BFI-Fr and the French NEO-PI-R. Results and discussion: Internal consistencies of the five personality dimensions were comparable for the BFI and the NEO-PI-R. Correlations between the corresponding pairs were all high (mean=0.74) and significant (p <0.001). These results provide evidence of the convergent validity of the BFI-Fr. Discriminant validity was excellent, with correlations between the other scales much lower than the convergent correlations, averaging only 0.14. General discussion and conclusion: All three studies demonstrate that the BFI-Fr is a valid, powerful yet very efficient tool, as are the original English version and the other translations. The much longer NEO-PI-R remains the instrument of choice. Psychiatrists, psychologists, and researchers can now make use of another inventory in French to measure the Big Five which has the advantages of being simple, robust, reliable, and economical (5 to 10min to complete). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Intolerance of Uncertainty and Intolerance of Ambiguity: Similarities and differences
- Author
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Grenier, Sebastien, Barrette, Anne-Marie, and Ladouceur, Robert
- Subjects
- *
FANATICISM , *ENTHUSIASM , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *ANXIETY - Abstract
Abstract: In the model of Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD) proposed by Dugas, Gagnon, Ladouceur, and Freeston (1998), Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) plays a central role in the acquisition and maintenance of worries. A similar concept, Intolerance of Ambiguity (IA) was introduced by Frenkel-Brunswik 50years ago. For decades, IU has been confused with IA. Researchers have applied them interchangeably. The main goal of this paper is to clarify and differentiate the notions of IU and IA, as well as to suggest new research avenues. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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