Cognitive Aspects of Intergenerational Change: Mental Models, Cultural Change, and Environmental Behavior among the Lacandon Maya of Southern Mexico

2002 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norbert Ross
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 2694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa Nursey-Bray ◽  
Robert Palmer ◽  
Bridie Meyer-Mclean ◽  
Thomas Wanner ◽  
Cris Birzer

Universities are both disseminators and producers of the climate knowledge needed to institute the social and cultural change required for climate adaptation and mitigation to occur. They also have the opportunity to lead and model pro-environmental behavior, yet often have large carbon budgets, partly caused by staff travel. This paper explores this topic via an institutional case study of what factors motivate the academic community to undertake plane travel and the implications this has for wielding wider societal influence in terms of pro-environmental behavior. We report on a year-long qualitative social science study of academic plane travel at the University of Adelaide, South Australia where we investigated the tension between academic requirements to travel and the institution’s formal commitment to sustainability within the Campus Sustainability Plan. We found that, while many academics were worried about climate change, very few were willing to change their current practice and travel less because they are not institutionally incentivized to do so. There is a fear of not flying: plane travel is perceived as a key driver for career progression and this is an ongoing barrier to pro-environmental behavior. We conclude that institutional and political change will be required for individual change to occur and sustainable agendas to be met within academic communities.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liseth Perez ◽  

<p>Water levels in Lakes Metzabok and Tzibaná, two large karst lakes in the Lacandon Forest of southern Mexico, declined dramatically within a two-week period in July 2019. Lake Metzabok (0.83 km<sup>2</sup>; z<sub>max</sub> = 25 m) dried completely, whereas in Lake Tzibaná (1.24 km<sup>2</sup>; z<sub>max</sub> = 70 m) it fell by ~30 m. Analysis of satellite images in Lake Metzabok suggested a combined reduction in surface area of ~0.86 km<sup>2</sup> and water volume loss of ~11.7 million m<sup>3</sup>. The sudden loss of such a large volume of water had negative impacts on local Lacandon Maya inhabitants, and profound ecological and environmental effects, in that it caused biodiversity loss.</p><p>We combined limnological and paleolimnological analyses to evaluate the ecological effects of the sudden loss of water from Lakes Metzabok and Tzibaná. We collected and analyzed remnant waters, surface sediments and short sediment cores from what remained of the water bodies to evaluate whether evidence for such drainage events is preserved in lake sediments. <em>In situ</em> water-column measurements yielded values similar to those from the previous six years when the lakes were filled, suggesting that evaporation was not the process responsible for lake level lowering, but rather that the lakes drained through fractures in the underlying karst bedrock. We collected phytoplankton and zooplankton samples from the remnant waters and found abundant diatoms, green algae, testate amoebae, crustaceans (copepods, cladocerans, ostracodes), insects (chironomids, trichopterans), collembolans, rotifers, tardigrades and nematodes. Environmental conditions in such small remnant ponds are probably stressful and unstable, but because many fish, the main predators in these ecosystems, did not survive the desiccation event, the aquatic environment is ideal for survival or recolonization by many invertebrate groups. Understanding the dynamics of this modern scenario with low lake levels is key for making paleolimnological inferences that use these aquatic bioindicators. We also investigated the commencing transition from an aquatic to a terrestrial habitat in Lake Metzabok. Abundant spiders colonized cracks in the dry sediment. Small, deep holes in surface mud were probably created by aquatic organisms when water levels decreased rapidly. Some cracks held rain water and were inhabited by tadpoles of the Gulf Coast toad (<em>Incilius valliceps</em>). The first plants to colonize the exposed lake beds belonged to the families Poaceae (grasses), Amaranthaceae (amaranths/chenopods) and Fabaceae (legumes), among others.</p><p>The sediment record from Lakes Metzabok and Tzibaná as well as testimonies of local Lacandon Maya inhabitants suggest that similar lake level lowering events occurred in the past. The hydrology of karst lakes is complex and unpredictable because multiple geological and hydrological factors control the water balance. The cause of this recent lake level lowering event remains unknown, but may be revealed by interdisciplinary studies of the limnology, paleolimnology, structural geology, geophysics, hydrology, geochemistry, genomics and geodesy of lakes and rivers in the region, as well as traditional environmental knowledge of the Lacandon Maya.</p>


Author(s):  
Burkhard Müller ◽  
Jürgen Gehrke

Abstract. Planning interactions with the physical world requires knowledge about operations; in short, mental operators. Abstractness of content and directionality of access are two important properties to characterize the representational units of this kind of knowledge. Combining these properties allows four classes of knowledge units to be distinguished that can be found in the literature: (a) rules, (b) mental models or schemata, (c) instances, and (d) episodes or chunks. The influence of practicing alphabet-arithmetic operators in a prognostic, diagnostic, or retrognostic way (A + 2 = ?, A? = C, or ? + 2 = C, respectively) on the use of that knowledge in a subsequent test was used to assess the importance of these dimensions. At the beginning, the retrognostic use of knowledge was worse than the prognostic use, although identical operations were involved (A + 2 = ? vs. ? - 2 = A). This disadvantage was reduced with increased practice. Test performance was best if the task and the letter pairs were the same as in the acquisition phase. Overall, the findings support theories proposing multiple representational units of mental operators. The disadvantage for the retrognosis task was recovered in the test phase, and may be evidence for the importance of the order of events independent of the order of experience.


2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 222-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina Hansen ◽  
Tom Postmes ◽  
Nikita van der Vinne ◽  
Wendy van Thiel

This paper studies whether and how information and communication technology (ICT) changes self-construal and cultural values in a developing country. Ethiopian children were given laptops in the context of an ICT for development scheme. We compared children who used laptops (n = 69) with a control group without laptops (n = 76) and a second control group of children whose laptop had broken down (n = 24). Results confirmed that after 1 year of laptop usage, the children’s self-concept had become more independent and children endorsed individualist values more strongly. Interestingly, the impact of laptop usage on cultural values was mediated by self-construal (moderated mediation). Importantly, modernization did not “crowd out” traditional culture: ICT usage was not associated with a reduction in traditional expressions (interdependent self-construal, collectivist values). Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.


1992 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 438-439
Author(s):  
Richard A. Griggs
Keyword(s):  

1968 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur H. Niehoff ◽  
J. Charnel Anderson

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Vargas ◽  
Sergio Moreno-Rios ◽  
Candida Castro ◽  
Geoffrey Underwood

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pia Justen ◽  
Robert R. van Doorn ◽  
Fred Zijlstra ◽  
Jelke van der Pal

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