1,378 results
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2. Tablet assessment in primary education: Are there performance differences between TIMSS' paper‐and‐pencil test and tablet test among Dutch grade‐four students?
- Author
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Hamhuis, Eva, Glas, Cees, and Meelissen, Martina
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- *
COMPUTERS in education , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *MATHEMATICS education (Primary) , *SCIENCE education (Elementary) , *CHILDREN , *PRIMARY education - Abstract
Over the last two decades, the educational use of digital devices, including digital assessments, has become a regular feature of teaching in primary education in the Netherlands. However, researchers have not reached a consensus about the so‐called "mode effect," which refers to the possible impact of using computer‐based tests (CBT) instead of paper‐and‐pencil‐based tests (PBT) to assess student performance. Some researchers suggest that the occurrence of a mode effect might be related to the type of device used, the subject being assessed and the characteristics of both the test and the students taking the test. The international TIMSS 2019 Equivalence Study offered the opportunity to explore possible performance differences between a PBT and a tablet assessment in mathematics and science among Dutch primary school students. In the spring of 2017, the TIMSS PBT and tablet test were administered to 532 grade‐four Dutch students. Item response theory was used to explore potential mode effects. This exploration revealed no significant differences in the student ability scales between the paper and the tablet tests for mathematics and science. Also, no systematic mode effects were found for the items with high reading demand. A marginal difference was found for girls outperforming boys on the TIMSS tablet test, although no gender differences in achievement were found for the PBT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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3. Civil servant tactics for realizing transition tasks understanding the microdynamics of transformative government.
- Author
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Braams, Rik B., Wesseling, Joeri H., Meijer, Albert J., and Hekkert, Marko P.
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CIVIL service ,PUBLIC administration ,POLITICAL science ,CHANGE agents - Abstract
Copyright of Public Administration 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Global Perspectives on the Absent Presence of Marginalised Children and Young People in the Public Realm.
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McKendrick, John H., Skelton, Tracey, and Van Melik, Rianne
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YOUNG adults ,CONCEPT learning ,PUBLIC spaces ,FAMILY research ,RESEARCH teams - Abstract
This paper introduces a collection of papers drawn from a session sponsored by the Geographies of Children, Youth and Families Research Group at the Annual International Conference of the RGS‐IBG in Cardiff (2018). This subsequent dossier seeks to advance our understanding of the 'absent presence' of marginalised children and young people in the public realm. The idea of an absent presence has permeated many fields of geographical scholarship and generally refers to the influence that is exerted by something that is not physically present (anymore); this can be an idea, object or person. The empty playground visualises such an absent presence in children's geographies. The three papers in this dossier discuss children and young people in public spaces in respectively the Netherlands, New Zealand and the US. The dossier closes with a commentary that reviews the theoretical, conceptual and substantive learning that has emerged across the papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Monitoring and data‐informed assessment of steel bridges ‐ lessons learned from a case study.
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Abspoel‐Bukman, Linda, Vliet, Agnieszka Bigaj‐van, den Besten, Caroline, and Joostensz, Ostar
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ANCHORAGE ,IRON & steel bridges ,STRUCTURAL health monitoring ,DECISION making ,ASSET management ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,SOLE proprietorship - Abstract
To support the asset owners and operators, in the IM‐SAFE project a framework for life‐cycle asset management has been developed, highly interrelated with the framework for data‐informed safety assessment. A practical decision‐making process has been proposed, aiming at enable proactive maintenance of transport infrastructure, supported by data from monitoring, inspection and testing. The decision making flow, which is a part of the proposed decision‐making process, describes the different stages of the assessment of new and existing structures, focusing on various levels (network, system and component) and taking into account the available data. This paper presents a case study which demonstrates application of the decision making flow for the Galecopper bridge in the Netherlands where corrosion related damage near the anchorage of the stay cables has been discovered during inspection and on which structural health monitoring (SHM) has been applied for diagnostics and support of the asset management. The paper discusses the factual application of the theoretical decision making procedure on different conceptual levels, adding additional dimension to the decision making flow, based on the practical experience and lessons learned (retrospective). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Serious gaming for better cooperation in flood defence asset management.
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den Heijer, Frank, Podt, Maarten, Bosch‐Rekveldt, Marian, de Leeuw, Annemargreet, and Rijke, Jeroen
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ASSET management ,PROFESSIONALISM ,FLOODS ,COOPERATION ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Flood defences are often situated in public spaces and are mostly multi‐functional, multi‐financed and multi‐managed. Cooperation in flood defence asset management is important because roles and responsibilities are fragmented within and between organisations. This complex context calls for mutual understanding from responsible role‐holders. Research has shown that serious games are instrumental to reflect situations in which technical and social complexity both play a role. Serious games motivate participants to learn and to change the way they learn. This paper presents the development, application, and results of a serious game 'Dike Dilemmas Under Pressure' that aims to create better mutual understanding between actors in flood defence asset management. The game was played with 67 professionals that fulfil a diversity of roles related to flood defence asset management in the Netherlands. The analysis of the results in this paper clearly shows different preferred cooperative attitudes between different groups of role‐holders and indicates potential misperceptions. The game participants were enthusiastic about the insights gained. They indicated that it helped them to recognise the broad variety of asset management dilemmas and become aware of their own cooperative attitudes and those of their colleagues towards dealing with these dilemmas. Future application of the game is recommended to monitor the cooperative attitudes of professionals in flood defence and to support the development of teams. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Asset management of flood defences as a co‐production—An analysis of cooperation in five situations in the Netherlands.
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den Heijer, Frank, Rijke, Jeroen, Bosch‐Rekveldt, Marian, de Leeuw, Annemargreet, and Barciela‐Rial, María
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ASSET management ,FLOOD risk ,FLOODS ,COOPERATION ,TASK performance - Abstract
Flood defences are in practice often multi‐used, multi‐managed and multi‐financed. Flood defence asset management contains technical, organizational and spatial complex issues involving multiple organizations. In the literature, little attention has been given to the conditions for successful cooperation between organizations in flood defence asset management. This paper elaborates on this aspect of mature asset management from a practical point of view. Although the importance of a fit‐for‐purpose cooperation seems trivial, practice shows that the shape of cooperation is often the coincidental result of implicit or ad‐hoc choices and is not deliberately designed. This paper reports on empirical data gathered in a case consisting of five different situations related to collaboration in flood defence management. The management context consists of three main tasks: performance assessment, reinforcement and daily management, and three decision levels: strategic, tactical and operational, resulting in nine different management environments and related interfaces. For effectively achieving desired outcomes, the shape of cooperation has to be explicitly chosen dependent on the complexity of content and organizational context, and relevant external circumstances: situational cooperation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. "They always want to argue with you": Navigating raciolinguistic ideologies at airport security.
- Author
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Sterk, Pippa
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AIRPORT security measures ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,LANGUAGE ability ,DUTCH language ,IDEOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Sociolinguistics 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
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. KNMI'23 Climate Scenarios for the Netherlands: Storyline Scenarios of Regional Climate Change.
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van der Wiel, Karin, Beersma, Jules, van den Brink, Henk, Krikken, Folmer, Selten, Frank, Severijns, Camiel, Sterl, Andreas, van Meijgaard, Erik, Reerink, Thomas, and van Dorland, Rob
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GREENHOUSE gases ,CLIMATE change ,GLOBAL warming ,ENERGY futures ,ATMOSPHERIC models - Abstract
This paper presents the methodology for the construction of the KNMI'23 national climate scenarios for the Netherlands. We have developed six scenarios, that cover a substantial part of the uncertainty in CMIP6 projections of future climate change in the region. Different sources of uncertainty are disentangled as much as possible, partly by means of a storyline approach. Uncertainty in future emissions is covered by making scenarios conditional on different SSP scenarios (SSP1‐2.6, SSP2‐4.5, and SSP5‐8.5). For each SSP scenario and time horizon (2050, 2100, 2150), we determine a global warming level based on the median of the constrained estimates of climate sensitivity from IPCC AR6. The remaining climate model uncertainty of the regional climate response at these warming levels is covered by two storylines, which are designed with a focus on the annual and seasonal mean precipitation response (a dry‐trending and wet‐trending variant for each SSP). This choice was motivated by the importance of future water management to society. For users with specific interests we provide means how to account for the impact of the uncertainty in climate sensitivity. Since CMIP6 GCM data do not provide the required spatial detail for impact modeling, we reconstruct the CMIP6 responses by resampling internal variability in a GCM‐RCM initial‐condition ensemble. The resulting climate scenarios form a detailed storyline of plausible future climates in the Netherlands. The data can be used for impact calculations and assessments by stakeholders, and will be used to inform policy making in different sectors of Dutch society. Plain Language Summary: To prepare society for the effects of future climate change, we need to know what the future climate will be like. In this paper we explain the method that is used to construct six different scenarios that describe possible future climates of the Netherlands. The scenarios make assumptions about future greenhouse gas emissions, and are based on the outcomes of climate models that simulate the response of the climate to these emissions. The KNMI'23 climate scenarios show that strongly reducing global emissions strongly reduces the expected changes in the climate of the Netherlands. In the scenario in which global emissions continue to rise until 2080, Dutch society will have to adapt to a much stronger increases in heat and precipitation extremes, increased risks of droughts with low river discharge in summer, and increased risk of flooding due to high river discharges in winter. In the coming years the climate scenario data will be used to evaluate what needs to be done to keep the country a safe place for people to live in and to thrive in, under changing climate conditions. Key Points: We present a methodology for the construction of regional climate scenarios using a storyline approach to partition uncertaintyResults from CMIP6 are reconstructed with a GCM‐RCM initial condition ensemble to produce high‐resolution scenario data for end‐usersSix scenario variants cover emission uncertainty (high, moderate, low) and uncertainty in the regional response (dry‐trending, wet‐trending) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. The patient representation struggle during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Missed opportunities for resilient healthcare systems.
- Author
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van de Bovenkamp, Hester, de Graaff, Bert, Kalthoff, Karin, and Bal, Roland
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HEALTH policy ,PATIENT advocacy ,PATIENT participation ,PATIENT decision making ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DECISION making ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,MANAGEMENT ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Background: The role of patient participation and representation during crises, such as the COVID‐19 pandemic, has been under‐researched. Existing studies paint a pessimistic picture of patient representation during the pandemic. However, there are indications that patient representatives have adapted to the new situation and can contribute to the resilience of healthcare systems. This paper aims to further explore the potential contribution of patient representatives for healthcare system resilience during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Methods: The study used a qualitative approach. We conducted a thematic analysis on the following data: interviews with client council members (n = 32) and representatives from patient organizations (n = 6) and focus groups (n = 2) to investigate patient representation on both the national policy level and organizational level in the Netherlands. Results: We identified the crisis discourse, the dependent position, the diversity of patient perspectives and the layered decision‐making structure as themes that help to understand what made patient representation in pandemic times a struggle for national and local patient representatives. The analysis of the subjects these representatives put forward during decision‐making shows that their input can play an important role in broadening discussions, challenging decisions, and suggesting alternatives during a crisis. We identified several strategies (e.g., collaborating with other actors, proactively putting subjects on the policy agenda, finding new ways of contacting their 'constituency') used by the patient representatives studied to exert influence despite the difficulties encountered. Conclusions: The struggle for patient representation during pandemic decision‐making is a missed opportunity for resilient healthcare systems as these representatives can play a role in opening up discussions and putting different perspectives to the fore. Moreover, the adaptive strategies used by representatives to influence decision‐making offer lessons for future representation activities. However, adaptations to the crisis decision‐making structure are also needed to enable patient representatives to play their role. Patient Contribution: We conducted interviews with patient representatives and discussed our preliminary findings with patient representatives during the focus groups. Zorgbelang, a patient organization supporting client councils and enabling and organizing patient participation for organizations and municipalities, was partner in this research and contributed to the interview guide, conducting interviews and focus groups. Additionally, the analysis made by the first author was discussed and refined multiple times with the partners of Zorgbelang and one of them co‐authored this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. "If you smile, they smile": Explaining highly educated migrants' feelings of being welcome in the Euregio Meuse‐Rhine.
- Author
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Reinold, Julia, Hooijen, Inge, and Özer, Merve
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PERSONALITY ,IMMIGRANTS ,SMILING ,MIXED methods research - Abstract
Creating a welcoming environment is high on policy makers' agendas to attract highly educated migrants. It is unclear, however, which factors contribute to migrants' feelings of being welcome in the host country. This paper addresses this knowledge gap by exploring the factors influencing highly educated migrants' feelings of being welcome in the host country. We develop a conceptual framework that differentiates between the host country's institutional (e.g., public services for migrants) and societal (e.g., tolerance, friendliness) incorporation capacity and the migrants' personal incorporation capacity (e.g., personality traits). The study follows a mixed methods research design using survey data (n = 391) and serial interviews (wave1: n = 67; wave2: n = 49) with highly educated migrants in the Euregio Meuse‐Rhine, a cross‐border region between the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany. The quantitative and qualitative findings indicate that all three indicators of the incorporation capacity framework contribute to migrants' feelings of being welcome in the host country. The societal incorporation capacity emerges as most important in the analysis. Lastly, interview findings emphasise the importance of language across all incorporation capacity dimensions. The paper contributes to the literature on high‐skilled migration, and particularly on high‐skilled migrants' experiences in the host country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Conflict and salience as drivers of corporate lobbying? An elite survey experiment.
- Author
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Aizenberg, Ellis
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LOBBYING ,COMMUNITIES ,TRADE associations - Abstract
This paper argues that a high degree of conflict and a low degree of salience on a policy issue drives corporations to lobby alone rather than via a business association. Previous research has addressed drivers at organizational, sector and structural level. This paper adds an issue perspective. These arguments are important as democracies thrive when business employs its power in a responsible manner. When corporations lobby alone, it can be a challenge to do so as they tend to overlook long‐term interests of the broader business community and society. The arguments are tested for the first time in a corporatist context through an original survey experiment among corporate lobbyists in Germany and the Netherlands. The study finds support for the expectation on conflict, which is striking as it indicates that corporations prefer to lobby alone due to conflict even in contexts in which they are not incentivized to do so. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. 'Too Weird for Banknotes': Legitimacy and Identity in the Production of Danish Banknotes 1947-2007.
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Sørensen, Anders Ravn
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BANK notes ,BANKING industry ,PAPER money design ,CENTRAL banking industry ,NATIONALISM ,HISTORY ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
In this article I argue that questions of banknote design are closely related to ideas of the national collective. Using the Danish banknote design competitions from 1947 to 2007 as an exemplary case I show how the Danish central bank, Nationalbanken, continuously sought to balance banknote iconography between different and evolving perceptions of the national community in an attempt to underpin the legitimacy and authority of Danish banknotes. I suggest that concepts from institutional theory can explain this equipoise relationship and I argue that banknote designers need to somehow reconcile conflicting ideas about the national community. As such, this article contributes to a more detailed understanding of the considerations and challenges facing banknote-issuing authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. Following the 'hype': The role of leisure practices during 'homeland' visits in transnational youth's way of relating to Ghana.
- Author
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Akom Ankobrey, Gladys
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YOUNG adults ,LEISURE ,ADULTS ,DIASPORA ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Drawing on 17 months of ethnographic fieldwork in the Netherlands and Ghana, this paper combines 'return' mobilities literature and youth studies to analyse the role of leisure practices during 'homeland' visits in transnational youth's way of relating to Ghana when they are entering into adulthood. Using the notion of mobility trajectories, the paper shows that leisure practices facilitate young people's ability to establish and renew intimate transnational relationships with diasporic friends, and Ghana‐based same‐generation relatives and romantic partners. Differing from earlier stays in Ghana, young people expressed their emerging sense of independence by exploring alternative sides of the country with these peers, based on common interests and belonging to the same life‐cycle cohort. The findings add complexity to the notion of the 'homeland' as a monolithic place of reconnecting with family and roots by drawing attention to the intersection between young people's pathways to adulthood and transnational mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Different views on collaboration between older persons, informal caregivers and care professionals.
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van Muijden, Teyler, Gräler, Leonoor, van Exel, Job, van de Bovenkamp, Hester, and Petit‐Steeghs, Violet
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BIOMECHANICS ,MEDICAL personnel ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,GERIATRIC psychiatry ,PATIENT care ,DECISION making ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PATIENT-professional relations ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,FACTOR analysis ,MEDICAL care for older people ,SOCIAL support ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COOPERATIVENESS ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,MANAGEMENT ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Background: Informal care features high on the policy agenda of many countries to deal with workforce shortages. As a consequence, care provision increasingly takes place in the care triad of care recipients, informal caregivers and care professionals. How collaboration between care partners takes shape depends on how the different partners perceive this collaboration. This paper aims to investigate the relative importance of the different aspects of collaboration from the perspectives of care recipients, informal caregivers and care professionals in the context of the care for older persons in The Netherlands. Methods: Using Q‐methodology, 32 participants ranked 28 statements that reflect different aspects of collaboration in the care triad and explained their ranking during a follow‐up interview. Participants comprised 9 older persons, 10 informal caregivers and 13 care professionals. Data were analysed using by‐person factor analysis to identify common patterns in the rankings of the statements. Emerging patterns were interpreted and described as views on collaboration using aggregated rankings and qualitative data from the interviews. Results: Five distinct views on collaboration were found: (1) Emphasizing warm collaboration, (2) trusting care professional's expertise, (3) open and compassionate care professionals, (4) responsive decision‐making by autonomous care professionals and (5) prioritizing care recipient's and informal caregiver's interests. Care recipients and/or informal caregivers were associated with views 1, 3 and, 5, whereas care professionals were associated with all five views. Conclusions: Our study highlights the importance of recognizing the potential diversity of views between and within different partner groups in care triads. Governmental and organizational policy makers, as well as healthcare professionals who aim to increase or support the involvement of informal caregivers, should take this heterogeneity into consideration. Patient or Public Contribution: An advisory board of older persons (care recipients and informal caregivers) was involved in the recruitment of the participants, the formulation of the statements and the reflection on the findings of the study and potential implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Learning how to think like a linguist: Linguistic reasoning as a focal point in L1 grammar education.
- Author
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van Rijt, Jimmy H. M.
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LANGUAGE ability ,LINGUISTS ,ACADEMIC language ,GRAMMAR ,LINGUISTICS education - Abstract
In recent years, the gap between academic linguistics and language education has become increasingly apparent, hindering the effective transmission of linguistic knowledge to students. This paper presents an overview of recent empirical research (mostly originating in the Netherlands) that seeks to bridge this gap by teaching students how to think like linguists within the context of L1 grammar education. The paper takes Dielemans' and Coppen's pedagogical framework for linguistic reasoning as its starting point, relates this framework to comparable initiatives and shows how recent studies have empirically examined different aspects of linguistic reasoning, including general linguistic reasoning ability, the role of linguistic metaconcepts and developing an appropriate epistemic attitude. The paper concludes with some desiderata for future research into this emerging research field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Long baseline bistatic radar imaging of tumbling space objects for enhancing space domain awareness.
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Serrano, Alexander, Kobsa, Alexander, Uysal, Faruk, Cerutti‐Maori, Delphine, Ghio, Selenia, Kintz, Andrew, Morrison, Robert L., Welch, Sarah, van Dorp, Philip, Hogan, Gregory, Garrington, Simon, Bassa, Cees, Saunders, Chris, Martorella, Marco, Caro Cuenca, Miguel, and Lowe, Isaac
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BISTATIC radar ,INVERSE synthetic aperture radar ,GEOSYNCHRONOUS orbits ,RADIO telescopes ,RADAR signal processing ,TRACKING radar - Abstract
Long baseline bistatic radar systems herald enhanced sensitivity and metric accuracy for space objects in geosynchronous orbits and beyond. Radio telescopes are ideal participants in such a system; in particular, they often feature large apertures with low‐noise temperatures and have stable, synchronised clocks. Pairing radio telescopes with high‐power radars creates new methodologies for Space Domain Awareness. This paper describes long baseline bistatic measurements using the Millstone Hill Radar in the USA, the Tracking and Imaging Radar in Germany, multiple receivers of the enhanced multi‐element remotely linked interferometer network array in the United Kingdom, and the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope in the Netherlands. The authors, a Research Task Group formed by the NATO Science and Technology Organisation Sensors and Electronic Technology Panel (SET‐293), performed novel bistatic and monostatic radar imaging experiments with real on‐orbit tumbling rocket bodies. These experiments on tumbling objects at near‐geosynchronous orbits highlight successful demonstrations of advanced bistatic Doppler characterisation across diverse imaging geometries. Specialised Doppler processing on tumbling targets, such as the Doppler superpulse algorithm, enables high‐fidelity rotation period estimation and determination of minimum target size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. A randomized study of parent‐ versus child‐directed intervention for Dutch toddlers with DLD.
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Zwitserlood‐Nijenhuis, Margo A., Wiefferink, Carin H., and Gerrits, Ellen
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SPEECH therapy ,TREATMENT of language disorders ,MOTHERS ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,FATHERS ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,SELF-efficacy ,COMPARATIVE studies ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PARENTS ,CHILD development deviations ,CHILDREN ,ADULTS - Abstract
Background: Indirect speech and language therapy, such as parent‐implemented intervention, has been shown to be an effective approach for young children with speech and language disorders. However, relatively few studies have compared outcomes of parent‐directed therapy with child‐directed intervention, that is, individual therapy of a child delivered by a speech and language therapist (SLT). Although speech and language therapists (SLTs) regard parental engagement as imperative for successful intervention, currently they predominantly use child‐directed intervention. Aim: To evaluate the effect of parent‐ versus child‐directed speech–language therapy embedded in usual care intervention for young children with developmental language disorder (DLD). Methods & Procedures: In a randomized trial, forty‐six 3‐year‐old monolingual children with DLD were assigned to parent‐directed intervention or child‐directed intervention groups. In addition, all children received usual care in special‐language daycare centres. Outcomes included children's language development and functional communication, parents' language output, parents' perceptions and their self‐efficacy. These were assessed at three time intervals, that is, at baseline, immediately after 6 months of treatment, and 1 year after baseline. The parent‐directed intervention consisted of twelve 50‐min sessions every 2 weeks with parent and child, consisting of parental training with immediate feedback by (SLTs. Children in the child‐directed intervention group received individual speech–language therapy in weekly 30‐min sessions for 6 months. Outcomes & Results: Intervention in both groups was equally effective. All children improved significantly in receptive and expressive language measures as well as in functional communication at all intervals. All parents used significantly more language support strategies and were less concerned about their child's participation in communication. Parents in the parent‐directed intervention group reported increased self‐efficacy in stimulating their child's language development. In contrast, parents in the child‐directed intervention group reported a decrease in self‐efficacy. Though modest, these group differences were significant in both the short and long terms. Both parents and SLTs were positive about the parent‐directed intervention. Conclusions & Implications: The effects of parent‐ and child‐directed intervention for young children with DLD are similar. The parent‐directed intervention adds to treatment options for parents as well as for SLTs and creates choices for shared decision‐making. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Language therapy for young children with DLD comprises various delivery models. Two of these are child‐ and parent‐directed therapy by SLTs. Compared with no treatment, both delivery models are effective, but it is unclear if one of these results in better language outcomes than the other. SLTs value child‐directed intervention more highly than indirect approaches where treatment is delivered by others. This study aims to compare the relative effectiveness of parent‐directed intervention with child‐directed intervention, both parts of multi‐component usual care intervention. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This randomized trial indicates that a parent‐directed intervention model is as effective as child‐directed intervention by SLTs for children's language development and functional communication. Parents' use of language support strategies was also similar in both intervention models, in the short and long terms. Like in child‐directed therapy, parent‐directed intervention reduces parents' concerns. Contrary to child‐directed treatment, parent‐directed intervention increases parents' self‐efficacy, that is, supporting their child's language development. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Though SLTs predominantly choose a child‐directed intervention model, the study results show that they can consider parent‐directed approaches too. There are no significant differences in children's language outcomes as a function of parent‐ or child‐directed intervention. Furthermore, parents and SLTs were positive about the parent‐directed intervention program and the SLTs evaluated it as valuable and feasible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Challenges in implementing sustainable construction: The Dutch Building Agreement Steel as an example.
- Author
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Cramer, Jacqueline
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SUSTAINABLE construction ,STEEL buildings ,BUILDING design & construction ,NETWORK governance ,EVIDENCE gaps - Abstract
In response to the alarming environmental problems, there is a pressing need for a fundamental shift towards sustainable construction. However, limited attention has been given in the literature to the governance of this transformative change. The paper aims to address this research gap by investigating how the transition to sustainable construction can be realized despite the barriers encountered. The analysis focuses on the Dutch Building Agreement Steel as an illustrative case. By examining the governance structure of the Agreement and evaluating its results thus far, the study concludes that a collaborative network of partners has effectively developed a roadmap and performed accompanying activities to achieve the intended objectives. Nonetheless, a key challenge lies in mobilizing the entire construction steel chain and the government during the upcoming scale‐up phase to actively adhere to the Agreement. This new form of network governance, facilitated by an independent intermediary, does not replace traditional public governance; rather, it complements it. The approach tested in the Netherlands holds potential for application in other contexts as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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20. Do social cues in instructional videos affect attention allocation, perceived cognitive load, and learning outcomes under different visual complexity conditions?
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Meier, Julius, de Jong, Bastian, van Montfort, Dorien Preusterink, Verdonschot, Anouk, van Wermeskerken, Margot, and van Gog, Tamara
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RESEARCH ,EYE movements ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COGNITION ,VISUAL perception ,ATTENTION ,REPEATED measures design ,BODY language ,PROMPTS (Psychology) ,VIDEO recording ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
Background: There are only few guidelines on how instructional videos should be designed to optimize learning. Recently, the effects of social cues on attention allocation and learning in instructional videos have been investigated. Due to inconsistent results, it has been suggested that the visual complexity of a video influences the effect of social cues on learning. Objectives: Therefore, this study compared the effects of social cues (i.e., gaze & gesture) in low and high visual complexity videos on attention, perceived cognitive load, and learning outcomes. Methods: Participants (N = 71) were allocated to a social cue or no social cue condition and watched both a low and a high visual complexity video. After each video, participants completed a knowledge test. Results and Conclusions: Results showed that participants looked faster at referenced information and had higher learning outcomes in the low visual complexity condition. Social cues did not affect any of the dependent variables, except when including prior knowledge in the analysis: In this exploratory analysis, the inclusion of gaze and gesture cues in the videos did lead to better learning outcomes. Takeaways: Our results show that the visual complexity of instructional videos and prior knowledge are important to take into account in future research on attention and learning from instructional videos. Lay Description: What is already known about the topic: Instructional videos are widely used in education.Learners need to timely attend to relevant content to learn successfully.Learners' attention might be guided towards relevant content with social cues (gaze and gesture of a presenter or instructor) but findings regarding learning outcomes are inconclusive. What does this paper add: This paper is the first to examine the role of the visual complexity of an instructional video in the interplay between social cues (gaze and gesture), learners' attention allocation, and learning outcomes. Implications for practice: The results show that visual complexity influences the learners' attention allocation and learning outcomes.Social cues (i.e., gaze & gesture) improved learning outcomes when controlling for learners' prior knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Epistemic in/justice in patient participation. A discourse analysis of the Dutch ME/CFS Health Council advisory process.
- Subjects
CHRONIC fatigue syndrome treatment ,PATIENT participation ,SOCIAL justice ,DISCOURSE analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
In healthcare settings, patient participation is increasingly adopted as a possible remedy to ill people suffering from 'epistemic injustices' – that is to their unfair harming as knowers. In exploring and interpreting patient participation discourses within the 2013–2018 Dutch Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) Health Council advisory process, this paper assesses the epistemological emancipatory value of this participatory practice. It reveals that in the analysed case, patient representatives predominantly offer biomedical knowledge about ME/CFS. They frame this condition as primarily somatic, and accordingly, perceive appropriate diagnostic criteria, research avenues and treatment options as quantifiable, objectifiable and explicitly non‐psychogenic. This paper argues that such a dominant biomedical patient participatory practice is ambiguous in terms of its ability to correct epistemic injustices towards ill people. Biomedicalized patient participation may enhance people's credibility and their ability to make sense of their illness, but it may also undermine their valid position within participatory practices as well as lead to (sustaining) biased and reductive ideas about who ill people are and what kind of knowledge they hold. The final section of this paper offers a brief reflection on how to navigate such biomedicalized participatory practices in order to attain more emancipatory ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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22. The logic behind entrustable professional activity frameworks: A scoping review of the literature.
- Author
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Hennus, Marije P., van Dam, Marjel, Gauthier, Stephen, Taylor, David R., and ten Cate, Olle
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NATIONAL competency-based educational tests ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PROFESSIONAL competence ,LOGIC ,MEDICAL fellowships ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists - Abstract
Introduction: Entrustable professional activities (EPAs), discrete profession‐specific tasks requiring integration of multiple competencies, are increasingly used to help define and inform curricula of specialty training programmes. Although guidelines exist to help guide the developmental process, deciding what logic to use to draft a preliminary EPA framework poses a crucial but often difficult first step. The logic of an EPA framework can be defined as the perspective used by its developers to break down the practice of a profession into units of professional work. This study aimed to map dominant logics and their rationales across postgraduate medical education and fellowship programmes. Methods: A scoping review using systematic searches within five electronic databases (Medline, Embase, Google Scholar, Scopus and Web of Science) was performed. Dominant logics of included papers were identified using inductive coding and iterative analysis. Results: In total, 42 studies were included. Most studies were conducted in the United States (n = 22; 52%), Canada (n = 6; 14%) and the Netherlands (n = 4; 10%). Across the reported range of specialties, family medicine (n = 4; 10%), internal medicine (n = 4; 10%), paediatrics (n = 3; 7%) and psychiatry (n = 3; 7%) were the most common. Three dominant logics could be identified, namely, 'service provision', 'procedures' and/or 'disease or patient categories'. The majority of papers (n = 37; 88%) used two or more logics when developing EPA frameworks (median = 3, range = 1–4). Disease or patient groups and service provision were the most common logics used (39% and 37%, respectively). Conclusions: Most programmes used a combination of logics when trying to capture the essential tasks of a profession in EPAs. For each of the three dominant logics, the authors arrived at a definition and identified benefits, limitations and examples. These findings may potentially inform best practice guidelines for EPA development. This study mapped the 3 dominant logics used in development of EPA‐frameworks. For each, a definition is provided with examples, benefits and limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Protecting the Rhine‐Meuse delta against sea level rise: What to do with the river's discharge?
- Author
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De Bruijn, Karin M., Diermanse, Ferdinand L. M., Weiler, Otto M., De Jong, Jurjen S., and Haasnoot, Marjolijn
- Subjects
SEA level ,FLOOD control ,FLOOD risk ,STREAMFLOW ,RIVER conservation ,WATER levels - Abstract
Sea level rise (SLR) will affect water levels and increase flood risk in river deltas. To adapt river deltas to SLR, various strategies can be followed. Many urbanised river deltas already have flood protection in place. Continuing a protection strategy under an increasing SLR, would mean higher embankments along the coast and rivers and possibly closing off the river mouths from the sea. However, closing of rivers will hamper the river flow. How to adapt river deltas and enabling rivers to discharge into the sea is a challenging question. This paper assesses impacts of SLR on flood risks in the Rhine‐Meuse Delta in the Netherlands in case the current protection strategy is continued and explores two alternative protection strategies: (1) a closed system with pumps and discharge sluices and (2) an open system in which rivers are diverted to less densely populated areas. The second alternative results in a more flexible river delta, which can accommodate larger SLR. The paper shows that a systems approach and using quantitative assessments of the implications of strategies is possible. This is needed to further assess the adaptation options, so we can anticipate and adapt when needed and avoid regret of decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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24. Plugging the holes: Identifying potential avenues and limitations for furthering Dutch civil society contributions towards flood resilience.
- Author
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Koers, Gerben J., Forrest, Steven A., and van Popering‐Verkerk, Jitske
- Subjects
CIVIL society ,CLIMATE change ,FLOOD risk ,FLOODS ,PLUG-in hybrid electric vehicles - Abstract
Climatic changes can cause unpredictability in flood regimes that traditional flood risk management (FRM) approaches may struggle with. Therefore, flood resilience is seen as a supplementation to these approaches, putting a larger emphasis on flood acceptance and minimising consequences. An (emergent) group contributing towards flood resilience is civil society. This paper examines how civil society contributions can be furthered and guided in the Netherlands as well as exploring potential limitations in doing so. To achieve this, England is used as a good practice example due to a more developed and defined role for civil society being present here. Data were collected on both actual (England and the Netherlands) and potential (The Netherlands) civil society contributions. These were compared to identify potential avenues for Dutch civil society contributions to flood resilience that can be further investigated. The research shows that the most promising avenues are improving advocacy from citizens, improving local flood awareness and developing relationships between FRM authorities and existing citizen groups that can be harnessed and mobilised to support flood resilience. Additionally, the research also provides insights into potential limitations for transferring resilience approaches from one context to another beyond the cases discussed in this publication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Developmental trajectories of spoken language comprehension and functional communication in children with cerebral palsy: A prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Vaillant, Emma, Oostrom, Kim J., Beckerman, Heleen, Vermeulen, R. Jeroen, Buizer, Annemieke I., and Geytenbeek, Johanna J. M.
- Subjects
- *
CHILDREN with cerebral palsy , *ORAL communication , *COHORT analysis , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LANGUAGE ability testing - Abstract
Aim: To investigate spoken language comprehension (SLC), single‐word comprehension (SWC), functional communication development, and their determinants, in children with cerebral palsy. Method: This was a prospective cohort study in the Netherlands spanning 2 years 6 months. The main outcomes were SLC and SWC, assessed by the Computer‐Based instrument for Low motor Language Testing (C‐BiLLT) and the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test‐III‐NL (PPVT‐III‐NL) respectively; and functional communication, measured by a subscale of the Focus on the Outcomes of Communication Under Six‐34 (FOCUS‐34). Linear mixed models were used to determine developmental trajectories, which were compared with norm and reference data. Potential determinants, for example intellectual functions, speech production, functional communication level (classified with the Communication Function Classification System, CFCS), and functional mobility, were added to assess their effects. Results: Children with cerebral palsy (n = 188; mean age 59 months, range 17–110) were monitored for 2 years 6 months. Developmental trajectories for SLC (C‐BiLLT) and SWC (PPVT‐III‐NL) were nonlinear; those for functional communication (FOCUS‐34) were linear. Compared with norm and reference groups, significantly delayed SLC, SWC, and functional communication development were found. Determinants for SLC and SWC were intellectual functions and functional communication level (CFCS); and for functional communication development (FOCUS‐34), speech production and arm–hand functioning. Interpretation: Children with cerebral palsy showed delayed SLC, SWC, and functional communication development compared with norm and reference groups. Remarkably, functional mobility was not associated with the development of SLC, SWC, or functional communication. What this paper adds: Children with cerebral palsy have delayed spoken language comprehension (SLC), single‐word comprehension (SWC), and functional communication development, compared to norm and reference data.Determinants for SLC and SWC development are intellectual functions and functional communication level.Determinants for functional communication development are speech production and arm–hand functioning.Functional mobility is not associated with SLC, SWC, or functional communication. What this paper adds: Children with cerebral palsy have delayed spoken language comprehension (SLC), single‐word comprehension (SWC), and functional communication development, compared to norm and reference data.Determinants for SLC and SWC development are intellectual functions and functional communication level.Determinants for functional communication development are speech production and arm–hand functioning.Functional mobility is not associated with SLC, SWC, or functional communication. Video Podcast: https://youtu.be/x09Tac7tsz0 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. Lessons learned from nursing crisis meetings: Qualitative study to evaluate nurses' experiences and needs.
- Author
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op 't Hoog, Sabine Adriana Johanna Josepha and de Vos, Annemarie Johanna Burgje Maria
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,MEETINGS ,NURSES' attitudes ,COVID-19 ,FOCUS groups ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,LEADERSHIP ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,COMMUNICATION ,THEMATIC analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) - Abstract
Aims: The aim of this study is to evaluate the nurses' experiences with the Nursing Crisis Meetings and to identify nurses' needs regarding the future governance structure. Design: Qualitative study. Methods: Two focus groups were conducted in February 2022 with participants of the Nursing Crisis Meetings (N = 15). We used thematic analysis to describe themes. Results: We identified five themes: opportunity to speak up, call for nursing leadership, call for control over practice and autonomy, development of a governance infrastructure and development of the professional nurse role. Conclusion: Nurses experienced the Nursing Crisis Meetings to be a positive and empowering infrastructure, which facilitates the unique opportunity to speak up and share experiences and concerns. This new infrastructure is a promising strategy to engage nurses during a pandemic and to build on a professional governance structure. Impact: This paper highlights the need for nurses to speak up and be engaged during the COVID‐19 pandemic and gives a practical example of how to put this infrastructure into practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ethics of mortgage advisers in the Netherlands: Professional attitudes and moral dilemmas.
- Author
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van Baardewijk, Jelle
- Subjects
ETHICAL problems ,PROFESSIONALISM ,MORAL attitudes ,BUSINESS ethics ,VALUES (Ethics) - Abstract
Since 2013, mortgage advisory has become an independent profession in the Netherlands. Initially working for mortgage providers, the newly nonpartisan advisers now work for standard advisory fees, thereby reducing conflicts of interest. In this article, I provide an ethical analysis of the different types of ethos of mortgage advisers, that is, the ways they see and talk about, and relate to their work in a certain way. The central research question is: What different kinds of ethos do mortgage advisers have, and which moral dilemmas do they experience in their advisory work? The existence of moral dilemmas is controversial in ethics but nonetheless experienced in real‐world business practice. An "ethological" understanding of morality is developed in this paper to understand how these dilemmas are experienced. Twenty‐nine mortgage advisers have participated in Q methodological research, a mixed qualitative–quantitative small‐sample method. Three different types of ethos were found: Principled Advisers, Moral Advisers, and Minimal Morality Advisers. In considering these three types, I argue that many mortgage advisers should professionalize their ethical stance and learn to address situations in which moral values are neglected. Business ethicists, in turn, need to acknowledge that something may be considered morally inappropriate but is still defensible in some other sense. In this paper, I develop a "layered" conception of business ethics that broadens the perspective from universal notions, such as "rights" and "duties," toward a concrete ethos that people have in a certain professional practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. What climate litigation reveals about judicial competence.
- Author
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de Lange, Douwe
- Subjects
CLIMATOLOGY ,SOCIAL change ,COURTS ,ACTIONS & defenses (Law) - Abstract
In recent years, the US and the Netherlands have been on opposing sides of the spectrum regarding climate litigation. Dutch courts, in several revolutionary climate cases, have been an arena of societal change, whilst climate claims in the US have been largely unsuccessful. In a way this difference seems strange, because the US judiciary has the power of constitutional review, whilst the Dutch judiciary does not. Against that background, this paper extensively compares the doctrines of judicial competence regarding political questions in both jurisdictions. As a comparative framework, this paper uses three judicial phases, namely: the institutional phase, the substantial phase, and the remedial phase. Climate litigation reveals that the Dutch doctrine of judicial competence is focused on the substantial and remedial phases, which has allowed it more freedom in reviewing climate litigation. On the other hand, climate litigation reveals that the US doctrine of judicial competence is focused on a strict institutional phase, dominated by the Political Question Doctrine (PQD). The main contribution of this paper to the constitutional debate is that climate litigation reveals fundamental differences in doctrines of judicial competence. This is not only an important takeaway for future climate litigation, but also, in terms of the Radbruch formula, for other potential gaps between the executive and justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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29. Learning patterns in early stage R&D projects: empirical evidence from the fibre raw material technology project in the Netherlands.
- Author
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M. H. Chappin, Maryse, Faber, Jan, and T. H. Meeus, Marius
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RESEARCH & development projects ,RAW materials ,CARDBOARD ,LEARNING ,FIBERS - Abstract
Past research has reported that learning processes in early stage R&D are either chaotic, or absent. We challenge this finding by elaborating Van de Ven et al.'s trial‐and‐error learning model and explore an alternative conceptualization. We explored the combinations of positive and negative outcomes and action course continuation and modification. We use data gathered in an R&D setting of a 4‐years pre‐competitive knowledge generation project in the Dutch paper and board industry. Whereas the Van de Ven and Polley (1992) approach applied on our data also would lead us to conclude that 'no learning' would happen, our decomposed model identified three distinct learning patterns: (1) a virtuous pattern of positive outcomes resulting in continuations of action courses; (2) a vacuous pattern of negative outcomes resulting in modifications of action courses; and (3) a verification pattern of positive outcomes resulting in modifications of action courses. We observed the virtuous and verification patterns during the first 2 years and virtuous and vacuous learning in the second 2 years. These results might be useful for R&D managers since they provide insight into how an early stage R&D project can develop and where managers might intervene and adjust action courses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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30. Vocabulary development at home: a multimedia elaborated picture supporting parent-toddler interaction.
- Author
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Gremmen, M.C., Molenaar, I., and Teepe, R.C.
- Subjects
EARLY childhood vocabulary education ,PARENT-child communication ,MULTIMEDIA systems in education ,CHILDREN ,PRESCHOOL children ,EARLY childhood education ,PRESCHOOL education ,PARENT-child relationships ,LANGUAGE & languages ,LEARNING strategies ,LITERACY ,MULTIMEDIA systems ,PROBABILITY theory ,HOME environment ,PRE-tests & post-tests - Abstract
Some children enter elementary school with large vocabulary delays, which negatively influence their later school performance. A rich home language environment can support vocabulary development through frequent high-quality parent-toddler interaction. Elaborated picture home activities can support this rich home language environment. This study compares the effects of a multimedia versus a paper elaborated picture on the parent-toddler interaction and toddlers' vocabulary development. In a within-subjects design, 20 toddlers (age 3-4) discussed a multimedia and a paper elaborated picture with a parent. Results showed that toddlers knew significantly more words (receptively and expressively) after both activities. Moreover, the improvement in receptive vocabulary knowledge was significantly larger with the multimedia elaborated picture compared with the paper-based picture. In addition, both parent and toddler engaged in a significant higher level of decontextualized language in response to multimedia. The present study shows that multimedia elaborated pictures can support parents at home to engage in a parent-toddler interaction that is richer and supports the development of receptive vocabulary more compared with traditional paper-based activities. In the future, multimedia-based home activities for toddlers' vocabulary development, supporting parent-child interaction, can be offered relatively cheap and easily via internet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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31. Coordination and Control in European Council Centred Governance. The Netherlands and the Covid Recovery Fund.
- Author
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Smeets, Sandrino and Bekius, Femke
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,TRACE analysis ,COVID-19 pandemic ,GAME theory ,DECISION making - Abstract
This paper provides a reconstruction and game‐theoretical characterization of the coming about of the €750 billion Covid Recovery Fund (RRF). It does this from the perspective of one prominent member state, the Netherlands, who was arguably the most prominent opponent to the idea. The case of the Netherlands is revealing for the ability of individual Member States to oversee and control EU decision‐making in this new system of European Council centred governance. We provide an embedded process tracing analysis of the decision‐making from the first Summit on the Multiannual Financial Framework of 20/21 February, up until the 'historic' deal on the MFF and RRF of 21 July. Where most media accounts and scholarly evaluations focus on the proceedings at the highest political level and particularly the role of German Chancellor Merkel, we highlight the early, technical‐level developments and proceedings, that laid out the tracks for the final deal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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32. "Transpiration and crop yields" by C.T. de Wit, 1958, Institute of biological and chemical research of field crops and herbage, No. 64.6, Wageningen, the Netherlands.
- Author
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Sinclair, Thomas R.
- Subjects
CROP yields ,FIELD crops ,CHEMICAL research ,BIOLOGICAL research ,GRASSES - Abstract
This article is part of a series of brief commentaries to highlight papers that have resulted in important and distinctly new perspectives in crop science. A criterion for selection of papers is that they must have been published at least 20 yr ago to allow for a long‐range perspective in assessment of the papers. The current article briefly reviews the paper by C.T. de Wit published in 1958 that explored the relationship between transpiration and crop growth. He organized his analysis data from experiments from a range of environments, many of which were done early in the 20th century. He found that there was a very high correlation within a species between growth and transpiration normalized for pan evaporation over a wide range of conditions, and the slope of the relationship was distinct for each species. He examined possible variation in the slope to growth conditions and found the slope remained essentially constant. Thus, he concluded that there was an intimate, stable dependence for each crop species on the amount of water lost and its growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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33. Caries, periodontitis and tooth loss after haematopoietic stem cell transplantation: A systematic review.
- Author
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van Gennip, Lucky L. A., Bulthuis, Marjolein S., Blijlevens, Nicole M. A., Huysmans, Marie‐Charlotte D. N. J. M., van Leeuwen, Stephanie J. M., and Thomas, Renske Z.
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE information services , *TOOTH loss , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *PERIODONTITIS , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DISEASE prevalence , *RESEARCH funding , *DENTAL caries , *HEMATOPOIETIC stem cell transplantation , *MEDLINE , *ADULTS - Abstract
Objective: A systematic review was conducted to assess scientific knowledge concerning the effect of haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) on the occurrence of caries, periodontal conditions and tooth loss, and to evaluate the prevalence of these diseases in adult HSCT survivors (PROSPERO 152906). Methods: PubMed and Embase were searched for papers, published from January 2000 until November 2020 without language restriction, assessing prevalence, incidence or parameters of caries, periodontal conditions and tooth loss in HSCT recipients (≥80% transplanted in adulthood). Bias risk was assessed with checklists from Joanna Briggs Institute, and data synthesis was performed by narrative summary. Results: Eighteen papers were included (1618 subjects). Half were considered at high risk of bias. Longitudinal studies did not show caries progression, decline in periodontal health or tooth loss after HSCT. The prevalence in HSCT survivors ranged from 19% to 43% for caries, 11% to 67% for periodontitis, and 2% to 5% for edentulism. Certainty in the body of evidence was very low. Conclusions: Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation, on the short term, may have little to no effect on caries, periodontal conditions and tooth loss. Caries and periodontitis may be more common in HSCT survivors compared with the general population, whereas edentulism may be comparable. However, the evidence for all conclusions is very uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Migrants and imports: Evidence from Dutch firms.
- Author
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Erbahar, Aksel and Gençosmanoğlu, Ömer Tarık
- Subjects
COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,MIGRANT labor ,IMMIGRANTS ,HIGH-income countries ,BUSINESS enterprises ,IMPORTS - Abstract
This paper examines the effect of hiring migrants on firms' imports using a rich employer–employee dataset from the Netherlands for 2010–17. We use an instrumental variables strategy, and find that firms that employ migrants from a high‐income country are more likely to import from that country. Our benchmark specification indicates that a one standard deviation increase in the share of migrant workers from a certain country raises their employer's probability of importing from those workers' origin country by 6.6 percentage points, explaining half of the average probability of importing from a given country. This result is robust to a battery of sensitivity checks, and the effects are driven largely by migrants working in trade intermediaries that import final goods and inputs. Our results suggest that migrants help to erode informational barriers and enable their employers to source goods from abroad. This paper is part of the Economica 100 Series. Economica, the LSE "house journal" is now 100 years old. To commemorate this achievement, we are publishing 100 papers by former students, as well as current and former faculty. Aksel Erbahar graduated from the LSE in 2010 with an MSc in Economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Benefits and Challenges of Downscaling a Global Reanalysis With Doubly‐Periodic Large‐Eddy Simulations.
- Author
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van Stratum, B. J. H., van Heerwaarden, C. C., and Vilà‐Guerau de Arellano, J.
- Subjects
SOLAR oscillations ,DOWNSCALING (Climatology) ,SOLAR surface ,SOLAR radiation ,PYTHON programming language - Abstract
Global reanalyzes like ERA5 accurately capture atmospheric processes at spatial scales of O(10) $\mathcal{O}(10)$ km or larger. By downscaling ERA5 with large‐eddy simulation (LES), LES can provide details about processes at spatio‐temporal scales down to meters and seconds. Here, we present an open‐source Python package named the "Large‐eddy simulation and Single‐column model—Large‐Scale Dynamics," or (LS)2D in short, designed to simplify the downscaling of ERA5 with doubly‐periodic LES. A validation with observations, for several sensitivity experiments consisting of month‐long LESs over Cabauw (the Netherlands), demonstrates both its usefulness and limitations. The day‐to‐day variability in the weather is well captured by (LS)2D and LES, but the setup under‐performs in conditions with broken or near overcast clouds. As a novel application of this modeling system, we used (LS)2D to study surface solar irradiance variability, as this quantity directly links land‐surface processes, turbulent transport, and clouds, to radiation. At a horizontal resolution of 25 m, the setup reproduces satisfactorily the solar irradiance variability down to a timescale of seconds. This demonstrates that the coupled LES‐ERA5 setup is a useful tool that can provide details on the physics of turbulence and clouds, but can only improve on its host reanalysis when applied to meteorological suitable conditions. Plain Language Summary: Modern global weather models are accurate in predicting atmospheric processes at scales of around 10 km or larger, but are less good at predicting smaller scale processes, like for example, the interaction between solar radiation, individual clouds, and the resulting clouds shadows that are cast onto the land surface. High spatio‐temporal resolution research models are able to capture these smaller scale processes, but require a coupling to a weather model to account for the day‐to‐day variability in our weather. In this paper, we present a framework to couple large to small scale models, and demonstrate both the benefits and challenges of using this coupled model setup. The coupled setup excels in capturing the aforementioned high frequency interactions between small clouds and surface solar radiation. However, the chaotic nature of broken to overcast clouds is proven difficult to represent. The coupled model setup is published as open‐source code, and is therefore freely available to the research community. Key Points: We developed an open‐source Python package named (LS)2D, designed to downscale the ERA5 reanalysis with turbulence and cloud‐resolving large‐eddy simulation (LESs)One month long experiments with (LS)2D and MicroHH over the Netherlands demonstrate both the skill and limitations of the coupled setupCapturing high‐frequency interactions between clouds and surface solar irradiance requires high resolution (O $\mathcal{O}$(10) m) LES [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Records of quality indicators for management of long‐term health conditions of patients with intellectual disabilities in Dutch residential care.
- Author
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van den Bemd, Milou, Suichies, Viviana, Bischoff, Erik, Leusink, Geraline L., and Cuypers, Maarten
- Subjects
- *
CHRONIC disease treatment , *CLINICAL medicine , *PUBLIC health surveillance , *MEDICAL quality control , *KEY performance indicators (Management) , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *ELECTRONIC health records , *MEDICAL coding , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *RESIDENTIAL care , *NOSOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Type 2 diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease contribute significantly to societal and individual impact globally. High‐quality management of these long‐term health conditions is important to prevent deterioration of health, although potentially more complex for patients with intellectual disabilities in residential care. Disease management in this context particularly benefits from complete and accurate recording of disease management. Without complete records, long‐term health conditions are more difficult to track due to the level of uncertainty regarding which clinical examinations have and have not been performed. This study therefore aims to examine the recording routines of quality indicators for disease monitoring for chronically ill patients with intellectual disabilities in Dutch residential care. Methods: This retrospective study utilised medical record data from a large Dutch long‐term care provider. We assessed the occurrence of cardiovascular disease (ICPC‐2 codes K74, K75, K76, K89 and K90), type 2 diabetes mellitus (T90, T90.02) and/or COPD (R91, R95). For adults with intellectual disabilities and long‐term condition, we analysed data entries in an 18‐month period (between July 2020 and December 2021). Observed consultation rates were calculated and presented in median with interquartile range and contrasted against the baseline number of consultations in primary care. Information on recorded quality indicators was presented in frequencies and percentages. Findings: Of the three long‐term conditions investigated, the most common was type 2 diabetes mellitus (8.6%; n = 287), followed by cardiovascular disease (5.8%; n = 195) and COPD (3.0%; n = 101). Of those who received management for their long‐term condition from their contracted GP, patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, or COPD had fewer consultations in 2021 than the Dutch baseline. Discussion of lifestyle was often not recorded. Disease monitoring quality indicators were recorded more often but at a lower frequency than expected. Conclusions: Because of the infrequent recording of quality indicators, recording of management of long‐term conditions for patients with intellectual disabilities in long‐term care appears suboptimal. Although this may not directly harm individual patients, it may jeopardise the quality of management of long‐term conditions, as suboptimal recording limits opportunities for evaluation and improvement. Within a broader trend towards data‐driven work methods in healthcare, recording of quality indicators requires attention from practice, research and policy. We should watch over long‐term diseases to help people stay healthy. We run tests, like checking blood pressure. The results are written in their medical records. These tests are like quality checks.We wanted to see if and how these quality checks were used, mostly for people with a learning disability living in care homes who also have heart disease, diabetes, or lung problems.We looked at their medical papers to see if these checks were there. We also looked at how often they saw the doctor.We found that chronically ill people with a learning disability went to the doctor quite often. But not as often as we expected. Also, the checks were not always written down. The talks about their lifestyle with the doctors were not noted very often.This can impact how well doctors care for the health issues of people with learning disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Learning Newtonian mechanics with an intrinsically integrated educational game.
- Author
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van der Linden, Anne, Meulenbroeks, Ralph F. G., and van Joolingen, Wouter R.
- Subjects
- *
HIGH schools , *INTELLECT , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *MECHANICS (Physics) , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *GOAL (Psychology) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *PHYSICS , *RESEARCH methodology , *STATISTICS , *LEARNING strategies , *GAMIFICATION , *VIDEO recording - Abstract
Background: Research on cognitive effects of educational games in general shows promising results. However, there are large variations in learning outcomes between individual educational games. Research on the design process and different design elements of educational games has led to some interesting directions, but some design aspects remain unclear. Objectives: We examined how an educational game designed on the basis of intrinsic integration theory, based on a strong alignment between game and learning goals, supports the learning of Newtonian mechanics. Methods: This study applied a mixed‐methods approach (N = 223). A pre‐ and post‐test design was used to examine possible learning and transfer effects fostered by playing the educational game, Newton's Race. To examine how players played the game, log data for each player were digitally recorded during gameplay. Results and Conclusions: Our findings demonstrated a significant positive learning effect of Newton's Race (p = 0.003, d = 0.201). This can be explained through the acquired log data. Log data show that players' gameplay mostly matched expected learning during the game, with physically correct game settings occurring more and more as gameplay progressed. The ability to transfer learned knowledge to other situations was shown to be limited to situations closely resembling the game environment. Implications: Similarly, designed intrinsically integrated games on different (physics) subjects could also foster learning in a relative short time. To foster transfer to other situations we propose embedding the game within other instructional activities. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic?: Research on cognitive effects of educational games in general shows promising results.There are large variations in learning outcomes between individual educational games.Some design aspects remain unclear on the design process and different design elements of educational games.Attempting to integrate learning with gameplay, without affecting the enjoyability of the game, is not easily achieved. What this paper adds?: The current study fits within the research body that emphasizes the importance of aligning gameplay with learning in educational games (i.e., intrinsic integration).Evidence for intrinsic integration as a key element in the design process, found by examining players' log data.A better understanding of how an intrinsically integrated game supports the learning of Newtonian mechanics. Implications for practice and/or policy: Similarly, designed intrinsically integrated games on different (physics) subjects could also foster learning in a relative short time.To foster transfer to other situations we propose embedding the game within other instructional activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The last free traders? Interwar trade policy in the Netherlands and Netherlands East Indies.
- Author
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de Zwart, Pim, Lampe, Markus, and O'Rourke, Kevin Hjortshøj
- Subjects
TARIFF ,COMMERCIAL policy ,NONTARIFF trade barriers ,INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) ,GREAT Depression, 1929-1939 - Abstract
There has still been too little detailed work on the protectionism that emerged in the wake of the Great Depression. In this paper we explore the experiences of two countries that have been largely neglected in the literature, the Netherlands and Netherlands East Indies (NEI). How did these traditionally free‐trading economies respond to the Depression? We construct a detailed product‐level database of tariff and non‐tariff barriers to trade on the basis of primary sources. While ad valorem tariff increases in the Netherlands were largely due to deflation, the country protected agriculture and textiles in a number of ways. Once quotas are taken into account, trade restrictiveness indices suggest that protection in the Netherlands and NEI was comparable to protection in the UK and India, respectively. The NEI quota system was largely geared to protecting Dutch exporters, and succeeded in doing so, but the reverse was not true. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Understanding migrants' attitudes towards state pension: The role of length of stay and settlement intention.
- Author
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Marcora, Sara, Seibel, Verena, Damman, Marleen, and Lubbers, Marcel
- Subjects
- *
PENSIONS , *SOCIAL indicators , *IMMIGRANTS , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *PUBLIC spending , *WELFARE state , *CROSS-cultural differences - Abstract
Old‐age state pension is central to European welfare states. Despite the growing number of migrants in Europe, little is known about their attitudes towards state pension. Pension systems are designed for a ‘sedentary’ population, as they require many years of contribution or residency in the country. This often affects first‐generation migrants, who arrive in the residence country only at a later point in their lives. In this paper, we draw on self‐interest theory, which is commonly used to explain individuals' support towards welfare institutions and theorize on how the migration experience adds to the standard model of self‐interest in relation to support for government spending on old‐age state pensions. Hence, we move beyond traditional indicators of self‐interest such as education and employment status and we test hypotheses on how migrant‐specific characteristics like length of stay and settlement intention in the residence country are related to migrants' support for government spending on old‐age state pensions. We use data from the Migrants' Welfare State Attitudes (MIFARE) survey (2016), the first cross‐national survey that focuses on migrants' attitudes towards the welfare state that was collected in Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands among nine different migrant groups from within and outside the EU. We find that migrants living in the country for over 5 years and those with longer settlement intentions have a higher support for government spending on pensions. We conclude that it is crucial to take migrants' unique migration experiences into account when assessing their attitudes towards state pension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Income change and sympathy for right‐wing populist parties in the Netherlands: The role of gender and income inequality within households.
- Author
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Roll, Yoav and De Graaf, Nan Dirk
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT-wing populism , *INCOME inequality , *INCOME , *POPULIST parties (Politics) , *SYMPATHY , *GENDER inequality , *SOCIAL dominance , *GROUNDED theory - Abstract
The global rise of right‐wing populist [RWP] parties presents a major political concern. RWP parties' voters tend to be citizens who have either experienced or fear economic deprivation. Income change constitutes a viable measure of this deprivation. However, previous contributions examining effects of income change on support for RWP parties have yielded diverging conclusions. This paper challenges previous findings by incorporating considerations of gender and within‐household inequality. We hypothesise a negative relationship between, on the one hand, personal and household income change and, on the other hand, sympathy towards RWP parties. Furthermore, we expect to find a stronger association between personal income change and RWP sympathy among men. Moreover, we expect the relationship between household income change and RWP sympathy to differ between genders. Finally, we hypothesise that this gender disparity can be interpreted by considering who contributes most to the household income. All these hypotheses are grounded in gender socialisation and economic dominance theories. Analysing Dutch LISS longitudinal data spanning from 2007 to 2021 (
N = 7,801,n = 43,954) through fixed‐effects multilevel linear regression models enables us to address various competing explanations. It appears that only for men, personal income change is negatively linked with sympathies towards RWP parties. However, considering who is the highest earner within households reveals that women are also affected by their personal income change if they earn the highest income. For both men and women, household income change is negatively linked with sympathies towards RWP parties. These results lend partial support to both the socialisation and economic dominance theories. The implications of these findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Hydrology as a Driver of Floating River Plastic Transport.
- Author
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van Emmerik, T., de Lange, S., Frings, R., Schreyers, L., Aalderink, H., Leusink, J., Begemann, F., Hamers, E., Hauk, R., Janssens, N., Jansson, P., Joosse, N., Kelder, D., van der Kuijl, T., Lotcheris, R., Löhr, A., Mellink, Y., Pinto, R., Tasseron, P., and Vos, V.
- Subjects
STUDENT volunteers ,PLASTICS ,WATER pollution ,HYDROLOGY ,POLLUTION prevention ,WATERSHEDS - Abstract
Plastic pollution in aquatic ecosystems is a growing threat to ecosystem health and human livelihood. Recent studies show that the majority of environmental plastics accumulate within river systems for years, decades and potentially even longer. Long‐term and system‐scale observations are key to improve the understanding of transport and retention dynamics, to identify sources and sinks, and to assess potential risks. The goal of this study was to quantify and explain the variation in floating plastic transport in the Rhine‐Meuse delta, using a novel 1‐year observational data set. We found a strong positive correlations between floating plastic transport and discharge. During peak discharge events, plastic transport was found up to six times higher than under normal conditions. Plastic transport varied up to a factor four along the Rhine and Meuse rivers, which is hypothesized to be related to the complex river network, locations of urban areas, and tidal dynamics. Altogether, our findings demonstrate the important role of hydrology as driving force of plastic transport dynamics. Our study emphasizes the need for exploring other factors that may explain the spatiotemporal variation in floating plastic transport. The world's most polluted rivers are connected to the ocean through complex deltas. Providing reliable observations and data‐driven insights in the transport and dynamics are key to optimize plastic pollution prevention and reduction strategies. With our paper we aim to contribute to both advancing the fundamental understanding of plastic transport dynamics, and the establishment of long‐term and harmonized data collection at the river basin scale. Plain Language Summary: Plastic pollution in rivers and oceans harms ecosystems and human livelihoods. Especially large plastic items (>0.5 cm) can be mistaken for food by animals, damage ships, and block waterways. Knowing how much plastic is floating through rivers is important for policy‐makers to reduce plastic pollution in the environment. In our study, we measured floating plastic pollution in the Rhine and the Meuse, two large European rivers that flow into the ocean in the Netherlands. From January to December 2021, a team of students and volunteers counted plastic items floating in the rivers from bridges. We found that more plastic was counted when the river flow was higher. The highest amount of plastic was measured during two flood events, when parts of the land next to the rivers were flooded. We think that more plastic leaks into the river when streets, riverbanks, and floodplains are under water. We hope that our study can help to better predict how much plastic flows through other big rivers around the world. Only when we know how big the plastic problem is, we can successfully solve it. Key Points: Plastic pollution is a global environmental challenge, but poorly understood and quantified due to a lack of reliable observationsRiver plastic transport increases significantly during discharge during peak eventsHydrology plays a crucial role in the transport and retention dynamics, and the spatiotemporal variation of floating plastic transport [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Curvilinear relationships in person‐environment fit research: Is there evidence for a too‐much‐of‐a‐good‐thing effect?
- Author
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Vleugels, Wouter and Flatau‐Harrison, Huw
- Subjects
EMPLOYEE attitudes ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,INDUSTRIAL psychology ,JOB satisfaction ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software ,PATH analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
In this paper, we revisit this well‐established linear relationship of person‐organisation, demands‐abilities, and needs‐supply fit with job satisfaction, commitment, and OCBs, and propose that this relationship may be linear for affective work outcomes but curvilinear for behavioural ones. We test this idea in a two‐wave sample of 212 employees, with measures taken 4 weeks apart. The results support the idea that the relationship between fit and behavioural outcomes can, indeed, be curvilinear. Overall, this study contributes to a better understanding of the nature of the relationship between fit and work outcomes by challenging the long‐held 'more fit is better' logic that pervades much of the PE fit research to date. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Patient satisfaction with stoma care and their expectations on mobile apps for supportive care.
- Author
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van der Storm, Sebastiaan L., Hensen, Nikita, and Schijven, Marlies P.
- Subjects
PATIENT satisfaction ,MOBILE apps ,DIGITAL literacy ,OLDER patients ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,PREOPERATIVE education - Abstract
Aim: Self‐efficacy in stoma care is essential, as it reduces morbidity and psychosocial problems. Mobile applications (apps) may optimise patients' self‐efficacy. This article investigates patients' satisfaction with stoma care, their attitudes towards a supporting app aiming to promote self‐efficacy and evaluate which functionalities are desired. Method: A survey was sent to members of the two stoma‐related patient associations in the Netherlands. Associations between patient characteristics, satisfaction concerning received stoma care, and willingness to use an app were evaluated. Results: The survey was completed by 1868 patients. Overall satisfaction was scored as 6.6, with shortfalls reported in the preoperative information provision, stoma site selection, and postoperative care. Patients of older age, who were unaware of getting a stoma, had an ileostomy, a low quality of life or psychosocial problems, were less satisfied. An app was expected to be of added value by 59.4% of the patients having a stoma for less than three years, compared to the significantly lower 43.8% expectation rate of the remaining study population (p < 0.001). Moreover, patients with a high frequency of physical or psychosocial problems expressed higher levels of interest. Conclusion: Patients were only moderately satisfied with their received stoma care. A supportive app is most likely beneficial for patients who had a stoma for less than three years, were in an acute situation, and/or have stoma‐related problems. Most patients prefer information via internet or on paper, although apps may offer additional benefits. It is important to acknowledge digital literacy and to council patients appropriately about the benefits and help them to use apps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Return Versus onward Migration: Go Back or Move On?
- Author
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Bijwaard, Govert E. and Wahba, Jackline
- Subjects
RETURN migration ,INTERNAL migration ,ECONOMIES of scale ,IMMIGRATION enforcement ,UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of unemployment on out‐migration by distinguishing between return and onward migration and controlling for total earnings. We use Timing‐of‐Events models and control for the endogeneity of total earnings, unemployment and out‐migration using administrative data from the Netherlands. Our findings suggest that unemployment triggers return migration more than onward migration. When total earnings are low unemployment increases the hazard of return migration. When total earnings are high the hazard rate of onward migration for unemployed immigrants increases. Thus, these findings highlight that out‐migration is affected both by unemployment and by total earnings as well as by the interaction between the two. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Embedding latent class regression and latent class distal outcome models into cluster‐weighted latent class analysis: a detailed simulation experiment.
- Author
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Di Mari, Roberto, Punzo, Antonio, and Bakk, Zsuzsa
- Subjects
LATENT variables ,PSYCHOLOGICAL contracts (Employment) ,CONDITIONAL probability ,REGRESSION analysis ,INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
Summary: Usually in latent class (LC) analysis, external predictors are taken to be cluster conditional probability predictors (LC models with external predictors), and/or score conditional probability predictors (LC regression models). In such cases, their distribution is not of interest. Class‐specific distribution is of interest in the distal outcome model, when the distribution of the external variables is assumed to depend on LC membership. In this paper, we consider a more general formulation, that embeds both the LC regression and the distal outcome models, as is typically done in cluster‐weighted modelling. This allows us to investigate (1) whether the distribution of the external variables differs across classes, (2) whether there are significant direct effects of the external variables on the indicators, by modelling jointly the relationship between the external and the latent variables. We show the advantages of the proposed modelling approach through a set of artificial examples, an extensive simulation study and an empirical application about psychological contracts among employees and employers in Belgium and the Netherlands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Resilience strategies of Filipino irregular migrant domestic workers in the Netherlands during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
- Author
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Siruno, Lalaine and Siegel, Melissa
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,UNDOCUMENTED immigrants ,FILIPINOS ,MIGRANT labor ,HOUSEHOLD employees - Abstract
COVID‐19 has brought a combination of health, socioeconomic and protection challenges to migrants everywhere, and a common view is that these effects have been harshest for those already in vulnerable situations before the pandemic. However, the lived experiences of Filipino irregular migrant domestic workers (IMDWs) in the Netherlands point to a range of impacts instead of a homogenous one. Drawing on interviews and participant observations, we analyse three specific pandemic consequences: income and financial remittance volatility, dual country or transnational precarity and physical and migration status immobility. We then analyse the resilience strategies deployed by IMDWs to navigate through such impacts. While our focus is on the microlevel, we also highlight the vital importance of the responses by the community on the mesolevel, and the government on the macrolevel. Following this relational approach, we put forward a conceptualisation of individual resilience as the capacity to navigate the negative impacts of a shock or crisis to maintain, adapt, or transform valued functionings. We argue that IMDWs cultivate resilience despite their precarious legal status; however, the effectiveness of strategies is contingent on personal circumstances as well as the sociopolitical context wherein they are deployed. The paper contributes to the literature by providing a more nuanced picture of the impacts of and responses to COVID‐19 in relation to migrants with irregular status. The articulation of resilience in terms of valued functionings also paves the way for the advancement of the still nascent research agenda on migration and human development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Wind observations from hot‐air balloons and the application in an NWP model.
- Author
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de Bruijn, Evert I. F., Bosveld, Fred C., de Haan, Siebren, Marseille, Gert‐Jan, and Holtslag, Albert A. M.
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC boundary layer ,METEOROLOGICAL observations ,ZONAL winds ,MERIDIONAL winds ,NUMERICAL weather forecasting ,SIX Sigma ,KALMAN filtering - Abstract
In this paper, we report on a wind observation method based on the movement of hot‐air balloons (HABs). A quality assessment was carried out by comparing against wind observations at the meteorological tower of Cabauw in the Netherlands during May–September 2018, and the obtained standard deviations in error were σu=0.65ms−1$$ {\sigma}_u=0.65\;{\mathrm{ms}}^{-1} $$ and σv=0.69ms−1$$ {\sigma}_v=0.69\;{\mathrm{ms}}^{-1} $$ for the measured zonal and meridional wind components, respectively. Subsequent comparison against short‐term forecasts of the HARMONIE‐AROME model showed a standard deviation of 2.5 ms−1 for the wind vector difference. From the HAB observation set, a case was selected with a rapidly changing wind field belonging to a small intensifying depression. The HAB wind observation was applied in data assimilation as a proof of principle for a single‐observation experiment. It is shown that in a complex baroclinic situation, the model state is slightly improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Field systems and later prehistoric land use: New insights into land use detectability and palaeodemography in the Netherlands through LiDAR, automatic detection and traditional field data.
- Author
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Arnoldussen, Stijn, Verschoof‐van der Vaart, Wouter B., Kaptijn, Eva, and Bourgeois, Quentin P. J.
- Subjects
LAND use ,GEOSPATIAL data ,OBJECT recognition (Computer vision) ,LIDAR ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,FORESTS & forestry ,DIGITAL preservation - Abstract
This paper discusses how the use of AI (artificial intelligence) detected later prehistoric field systems provides a more reliable base for reconstructing palaeodemographic trends, using the Netherlands as a case study. Despite its long tradition of settlement excavations, models that could be used to reconstruct (changes in) prehistoric land use have been few and often relied on (insufficiently mapped) nodal data points such as settlements and barrows. We argue that prehistoric field systems of field plots beset on all sides by earthen banks—known as Celtic fields—are a more suitable (i.e. less nodal) proxy for reconstructing later prehistoric land use. For four 32.25 km2 case study areas in different geogenetic regions of the Netherlands, prehistoric land use surface areas are modelled based on conventional methods and the results are compared to the results we obtained by using AI‐assisted detection of prehistoric field systems. The nationally available LiDAR data were used for automated detection. Geotiff DTM images were fed into an object detection algorithm (based on the YOLOv4 framework and trained with known Dutch sites), and resultant geospatial vectors were imported into GIS. Our analysis shows that AI‐assisted detection of prehistoric embanked field systems on average leads to a factor 1.84 increase in known surface areas of Celtic fields. Modelling the numbers of occupants from this spatial coverage, yields population sizes of 37–135 persons for the case study regions (i.e. 1.15 to 4.19 p/km2). This range aligns well with previous estimates and offers a more robust and representative proxy for palaeodemographic reconstructions. Variations in land use coverage between the regions could be explained by differences in present‐day land use and research intensity. Particularly the regionally different extent of forestlands and heathlands (ideal for the (a) preservation and (b) automated LiDAR detection of embanked field systems) explains minor variations between the four case study regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Inclusive Play Policies: Disabled Children And Their Access To Dutch Playgrounds.
- Author
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Van Melik, Rianne and Althuizen, Nick
- Subjects
CHILDREN with disabilities ,PLAYGROUNDS ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Despite the 1989 UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, many cities are still struggling to facilitate inclusive playgrounds. This paper contributes to our understanding of the everyday landscapes of disabled childhood, by investigating the play‐policy of Dutch municipalities via a mixed‐methods approach. Our online survey reveals that 90 per cent have a play‐policy, although the length and content of these documents vary extensively, and accessibility and inclusive play are often lacking. Additionally, we focus on the play‐policy of two municipalities in the east of the Netherlands. Interviews with civil servants, play professionals and families with disabled children show that municipalities willingly respond to parents' requests for playground changes. Though resulting in tailor‐made adjustments, this also configures disability as an individual problem. Parents and policy‐makers also highlight different expectations regarding playground adjustments and investments. The paper therefore calls for open communication to avoid disabled children being involuntarily absent in public space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Urban‐Rural Polarisation in Times of the Corona Outbreak? The Early Demographic and Geographic Patterns of the SARS‐CoV‐2 Epidemic in the Netherlands.
- Author
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Boterman, Willem R.
- Subjects
SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,EPIDEMICS ,POPULATION density ,DEBATE ,CATHETER-related infections - Abstract
The global health crisis due to the pandemic of the SARS‐CoV‐2 is associated with processes of urbanisation and globalisation. Globally well‐connected areas with high population densities are hence expected to be disproportionately affected by COVID‐19. This paper investigates the role of population density within the Netherlands, comparing hospitalisation and mortality related to COVID‐19 across municipalities. The paper finds that infections, hospitalisation and mortality related to COVID‐19 are not clearly correlated with the population density or urbanity of the municipality, also when controlling for age and public health factors. The paper concludes that while the public debate stresses the elevated risk of infections in cities, due to transgressive behaviour, the evidence in this paper suggests that the geography of the epidemic in the Netherlands is more complex. It speculates that the variation in urbanisation in most of the country might just be too small to expect significant differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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