A Multidisciplinary Research Framework on Green Schools: Infrastructure, Social Environment, Occupant Health, and Performance

2017 ◽  
Vol 87 (5) ◽  
pp. 376-387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheryl Magzamen ◽  
Adam P. Mayer ◽  
Stephanie Barr ◽  
Lenora Bohren ◽  
Brian Dunbar ◽  
...  
Indoor Air ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 457-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheryl Magzamen ◽  
Adam P Mayer ◽  
Joshua W Schaeffer ◽  
Stephen J Reynolds

The purpose of this paper is to provide a more realistic competitive advantage concept in order to investigate the impact of an innovative mindset, behaviour and performance on Halal SME’s competitive advantage in the context of a challenging worldwide Halal’s market. This study uses an constant methodology by outlining, analysing, arranging, and focusing the current state of the literature and proposes a research framework which assist in overcoming the restraints encountered in previous empirical research. The use of an innovative mindset and behaviour enables the researchers to provide a great explanation of a innovative performance and its relationship to competitive advantage. This study seeks to contribute to the practice of competitiveness of Halal SMEs area of research. Specifically, this study emphasises that Halal SMEs owner-managers should have innovative mindsets that can stimulate innovative behaviour and which can be translated into innovation performance and subsequently competitive advantage.


Author(s):  
Luc J. Martin ◽  
David J. Hancock ◽  
Jean Côté

Talent development in sport is achieved through years of preparation and requires constant interaction between personal and contextual resources. Accordingly, extensive research has been dedicated to understanding factors that contribute to sport performance. Literature suggests the factors influencing athletic development can be classified in terms of the physical environment, the social environment, and engaging learning activities. Investigations pertaining to the physical environment suggest the importance of appropriate settings, which can relate to the sport organization or the larger community. Researchers must also cogitate the activities in which athletes take part. These considerations involve the maturational status of athletes, the volume of deliberate practice and play, and early specialization versus diversification. Finally, the salience of the social environment in relation to sport performance cannot be overlooked. Not surprisingly, the relations established with social agents (i.e., coaches, peers/teammates, parents) can facilitate or impede the developmental process. Consequently, the development of athletes in the context of sport and performance psychology extends past the individual and is influenced by several factors that must be discussed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony R. Mawson

Learning disorders are often associated with persistent hyperactivity and aggression and are part of a spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders. A potential clue to understanding these linked phenomena is that physical exercise and passive forms of stimulation are calming, enhance cognitive functions and learning, and are recommended as complementary treatments for these problems. The theory is proposed that hyperactivity and aggression are intense stimulation-seeking behaviors (SSBs) driven by increased brain retinergic activity, and the stimulation thus obtained activates opposing nitrergic systems which inhibit retinergic activity, induce a state of calm, and enhance cognition and learning. In persons with cognitive deficits and associated behavioral disorders, the retinergic system may be chronically overactivated and the nitrergic system chronically underactivated due to environmental exposures occurring pre- and/or postnatally that affect retinoid metabolism or expression. For such individuals, the intensity of stimulation generated by SSB may be insufficient to activate the inhibitory nitrergic system. A multidisciplinary research program is needed to test the model and, in particular, to determine the extent to which applied physical treatments can activate the nitrergic system directly, providing the necessary level of intensity of sensory stimulation to substitute for that obtained in maladaptive and harmful ways by SSB, thereby reducing SSB and enhancing cognitive skills and performance.


2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 257-264
Author(s):  
Milan Tanic ◽  
Danica Stankovic ◽  
Vojislav Nikolic ◽  
Aleksandra Kostic

The paper discusses the implications of the social environment on the modern pedagogical process and their interdependence with the physical environment. The initial assumption is that pedagogical processes form certain types of social activities which encourage the development of the appropriate physical environment. Different patterns of social environment are defined by the typological analysis of social activities in the pedagogical process. In addition, the basic research framework implies the cooperation of various forms of social environment and the influencing factors on the organization of the physical environment in terms of contextual changes in the pedagogical process. Defined qualitative properties suggest the creation of a polyvalent physical environment that offers a whole range of intermediate forms for the implementation of various forms of social activities in the pedagogical process.


2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 101-133
Author(s):  
Jinho Choi ◽  
◽  
Sunyang Chung ◽  
Kyungbae Park ◽  
Dae-Chul Jang ◽  
...  

1960 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 387-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Gedda

SUMMARYAfter elaborating the data supplied by 351 questionnaires of a survey addressed to 1,241 twin-pairs, the Author shows differences in the behavior of MZ and DZ twin-pairs as to the sports phenomenon. By a first criterium of analysis, relative to sports practice in general, intra-pair dissimilarity is found to correspond to 6% in the case of MZ and to 85% in the case of DZ twin pairs. A second criterium of analysis concerned the kind of sport practiced by pairs concordant as to sports practice in general: the observed concordance as to the kind of sport practiced was more frequent in MZ then in DZ twin-pairs. By a third criterium concerning individual role and performance, the Author has been able to demonstrate that the distribution of DZ pairs, as to concordance, follows opposite patterns than that of MZ pairs. The Author concludes that sports activity, besides exogenous influences, (social environment, training, economic level etc.) is certainly also conditioned by genotypic, hereditary factors.


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