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Martin Schröder glaubt nicht an Unterschiede zwischen den Generationen. Das angeblich Typische, sagt der Soziologe im Interview, seien meist Aussagen einer radikalen Minderheit oder Anekdoten.
In:
Spiegel online, 2019-03-20
(2019),
| Christopher Piltz, Jurek Skrobala
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Reverse correlation (RC) is a data-driven method from social psychology that has been effectively shown to visualize the mental representations that humans hold regarding facial attributes. The method helps to understand what features are relevant in terms of the evaluation of faces, such as dominance or submissiveness. To the best of our knowledge, RC has solely been applied to faces within the area ...
In:
Journal of Environmental Psychology
98 (2024), 102401
| Kira Pohlmann, Nour Tawil, Timothy R. Brick, Simone Kühn
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This research paper investigated the effect of consumers’ Big Five personality traits on the adoption of residential photovoltaic systems in Germany. To account for different types or groups of households, a multigroup structural equation model with N = 9,281 individuals was analyzed using data from a nationwide, representative household panel. It could be shown that the ways in which personality traits ...
In:
Energy Research & Social Science
77 (2021), 102087
| Stefan Poier
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Measuring multidimensional inequality by means of a univariate index requires weighting the dimensions of inequality. This paper explores the normative and empirical problems involved in measuring inequality by estimating hedonic weights on the basis of German microdata. In contrast to previous works, the perception of inequality, derived from subjective social status, has been used to estimate a weighting ...
In:
Social Indicators Research
146 (2019), 3, 511-531
| Philipp Poppitz
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In the last few decades, the study of ordinal data in which the variable of interest is not exactly observed but only known to be in a specific ordinal category has become important. In Psychometrics such variables are analysed under the heading of item response models (IRM). In Econometrics, subjective well-being (SWB) and self-assessed health (SAH) studies, and in marketing research, Ordered Probit, ...
Amsterdam:
Tinbergen Institute,
2024,
(Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper TI 2024-075/III)
| Bernard M.S. van Praag, Peter J. Hop, William H. Greene
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Die kontinuierliche Digitalisierung der Arbeitswelt führt zu immer schnelllebigeren und komplexeren Arbeitsumfeldern, welche auf der effektiven Nutzung von Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien (IKT) beruhen. Arbeitsfelder transformieren und verdichten sich mit rasanter Geschwindigkeit. Parallel steigt das durchschnittliche Alter der arbeitnehmenden Population und die Arbeitszufriedenheit sinkt. ...
2023,
| Lukas Miles Pramanik
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We revisit the Easterlin paradox about the flatness of the happiness trend over the long run, in spite of sustained economic development. With a bounded scale that explicitly refers to “the best possible life for you” and “the worst possible life for you”, is it even possible to observe a rising trend in self-declared life satisfaction? We consider the possibility of rescaling, i.e. that the interpretation ...
Paris School of Economics,
2024,
(Working Paper No. 2024-61)
| Alberto Prati, Claudia Senik
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Düsseldorf:
Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliches Institut (WSI),
2024,
(WSI Policy Brief No. 82)
| Toralf Pusch
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Measures of private wealth often refer to households or tax-units, but how does household wealth relate to individual welfare? Analogous to household economies of scale for consumption, this paper offers a methodology and empirical results to account for household wealth scale effects. These scale effects vary depending on the purpose of savings: funding consumption versus holding wealth for motives ...
In:
Review of Income and Wealth
71 (2025), 1, e70002
| Severin Rapp
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Aim: Maintaining transnational ties may be an indication of poor integration into the host society (according to classical ‘assimilation theory’) or may convey additional capital resources to immigrants (the ‘transmigrant’ view of migration). Consequences for health would be negative in the first and positive in the second scenario. We tested the hypotheses that (1) maintaining transnational ties may ...
In:
Journal of Public Health
27 (2019), 4, 507-517
| Oliver Razum, Jürgen Breckenkamp, Margit Fauser