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1. Energy efficiency and environmental impacts of high power gas metal arc welding

2. Environmental energy efficiency of single wire and tandem gas metal arc welding

3. Assessing carbon dioxide emission reduction potentials of improved manufacturing processes using multiregional input output frameworks

5. Life Cycle Assessment of welding technologies for thick metal plate welds

10. An Investigation of Meat Eating in Samples from Australia and Germany: The Role of Justifications, Perceptions, and Empathy.

11. Food healthiness judgements among Brazilian and German lay adults.

12. Effect of nutrient, processing and hedonic claims on food-related perceptions: An experimental online study in Brazil and Germany.

13. Do nutrition knowledge, food preferences, and habit strength moderate the association between preference for intuition and deliberation in eating decision-making and dietary intake?

14. Traditional and modern eating in older adults: a comparison between an urban and rural sample from Gujarat, Western India.

15. Similar or different? Comparing food cultures with regard to traditional and modern eating across ten countries.

16. Preference for Intuition and Deliberation in Eating Decision-making: Scale validation and associations with eating behaviour and health.

17. The Relationship Between Healthy Eating Motivation and Protein Intake in Community-Dwelling Older Adults With Varying Functional Status.

18. Why We Eat What We Eat: Assessing Dispositional and In-the-Moment Eating Motives by Using Ecological Momentary Assessment.

19. Understanding traditional and modern eating: the TEP10 framework.

20. The Eating Motivation Survey in Brazil: Results From a Sample of the General Adult Population.

21. Positive Self-perceptions of Aging Promote Healthy Eating Behavior Across the Life Span via Social-Cognitive Processes.

22. Measuring eating motives in older adults with and without functional impairments with The Eating Motivation Survey (TEMS).

23. Describing the Process of Adopting Nutrition and Fitness Apps: Behavior Stage Model Approach.

24. The positive eating scale: relationship with objective health parameters and validity in Germany, the USA and India.

25. The Eating Motivation Survey: results from the USA, India and Germany.

26. What Constitutes Traditional and Modern Eating? The Case of Japan.

27. Self-Other Differences in Perceiving Why People Eat What They Eat.

28. Fulfilled Emotional Outcome Expectancies Enable Successful Adoption and Maintenance of Physical Activity.

29. Comparative optimism about healthy eating.

30. I Eat Healthier Than You: Differences in Healthy and Unhealthy Food Choices for Oneself and for Others.

31. Being and feeling liked by others: how social inclusion impacts health.

32. The bright side of stress-induced eating: eating more when stressed but less when pleased.

33. Why we eat what we eat. The Eating Motivation Survey (TEMS).

34. Candy or apple? How self-control resources and motives impact dietary healthiness in women.

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