What Keeps a Vibrant Population Together?

2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 347-373
Author(s):  
Jayati Deshmukh ◽  
◽  
Srinath Srinivasa ◽  
Sridhar Mandyam ◽  
◽  
...  

Managing diversity is a challenging problem for organizations and governments. Diversity in a population may be of two kinds—acquired and innate. The former refers to diversity acquired by pre-existing social or organizational environments, attracting employees or immigrants because of their wealth and opportunities. Innate diversity, on the other hand, refers to a collection of pre-existing communities having to interact with one another and to build an overarching social or organizational identity. While acquired diversity has a prior element of common identity, innate diversity needs to build a common identity from a number of disparate regional or local identities. Diversity in any large population may have different extents of acquired and innate elements. In this paper, innate and acquired diversity are modeled in terms of two factors, namely: insularity and homophily, respectively. Insularity is the tendency of agents to act cooperatively only with others from the same community, which is often the primary challenge of innate diversity; while homophily is the tendency of agents to prefer members from their own community to start new social or business connections, which is often the primary challenge in acquired diversity. The emergence of network structure is studied when insularity and homophily are varied. In order to promote cooperation in a diverse population, the role played by a subset of agents called “global” agents who are not affected by homophily and insularity considerations is also studied. Simulation results show several interesting emergent properties. While the global agents are shown to acquire high betweenness, they are by no means the wealthiest or the most powerful in the network. However, the presence of global agents is important for the regional agents whose own wealth prospects increase because of their interaction with global agents.

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth David Strang ◽  
Narasimha Rao Vajjhala

The authors investigated consumer e-commerce behavior in a Brazil-Russia-India-China-South-Africa (BRICS) region from a socio-cultural perspective. BRICS countries are important to study because they have a large population representative of other global e-services markets, they account for 40% of the world's population, 26% of the world's land and approximately a third of the world's gross domestic economic e-commerce production, plus residents are habitual consumers of mobile technology like smartphones. A binary logistic regression model revealed that young educated consumer satisfaction with e-services, e-service happiness, positive feelings and e-service pleasant feelings, but not e-service excitement, could predict purchase behavior. The model correctly classified 87.3% of the e-commerce consumers using two factors and a second model with one factor correctly categorized 90.5% of them. These results are important for managers and academics to consider.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petia Genkova

Successfully managing diversity is becoming more and more important in today's working environment. In this context, the development of intercultural competencies is of significant importance. The presented study gives an overview of the relationship between dimensions of multicultural effectiveness and two factors that are relevant in diversity settings: xenophobia, and international experience. It is shown that, while sole personality dimensions only have limited impact on a positive attitude towards persons with a migration background, a multicultural personality, as a whole, is very important in this context. Furthermore, a person with international experience shows higher values in open-mindedness, but is often also characterized by a lower degree of emotional stability.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 99
Author(s):  
Rahma Amir

Indonesia merupakan Negara yang kaya  akan kebudayaan dengan jumlah penduduk yang besar menjadikan Indonesia memiliki masyarakat dengan suku, golongan, ras, budaya, adat istiadat, agama yang beraneka ragam. Hal tersebut disebabkan beberapa faktor yang di antaranya adalah keadaan sosio-antropologis, geografis dan teritorial Indonesia yang letaknya di antara samudera Hindia dan samudera Pasifik yang sangat potensial berkembangnya pluralitas budaya dan agama dalam masyarakat Indonesia. Akibat perkembangan pluralitas  tersebut kemudian memunculkan perkawinan yang variatif yaitu salah satunya bentuk perkawinan beda agama. Pada umumnya, perkawinan dianggap sesuatu hal yang suci dan karenanya setiap agama selalu menghubungkan kaidah-kaidah perkawinan dengan ajaran agama. Sesungguhnya Islam, tidak melarang perkawinan antara muslim dengan wanita ahl kitab (Yahudi dan Nasrani), dengan keharusan memenuhi beberapa ketentuan. Sebagai Negara demokrasi, perkawinan beda agama diatur dalam beberapa peraturan yang termaktub dalam UU RI No 1 Tahun 1974 tentang Perkawinan dan peraturan-peraturan lainnya.Indonesia is a country that is rich in culture with a large population making Indonesia has a diverse population, ethnicity, race, culture, customs, religion. This is due to several factors including the socio-anthropological, geographical and territorial conditions of Indonesia which are located between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean which has the potential to develop cultural and religious plurality in Indonesian society. As a result of the development of plurality, then a variety of marriages emerged, one of which was the form of interfaith marriage. In general, marriage is considered to be something sacred and therefore every religion always connects the rules of marriage with religious teachings. Indeed, Islam does not prohibit marriage between Muslims and ahl Kitab women (Jews and Christians), with the obligation to fulfill several provisions. As a democratic country, interfaith marriages are regulated in a number of regulations embodied in RI Law No. 1 of 1974 concerning Marriage and other regulations.


Author(s):  
F.G. Lightfoot ◽  
L.E. Grau ◽  
M.M. Cassidy ◽  
G.R. Tadvalkar ◽  
G.V. Vahouny

Psyllium hydrophillic mucilloid is a natural gelling fiber consumed by a large population of our society. It is used as a bulk-producing laxative and in the treatment of gastrointestinal disorders such as “Irritable Bowel Syndrome”. The literature pertaining to the ultrastructural effects of this agent is sparse.This study documents morphological changes induced by psyllium. Animals fed a diet containing 2% psyllium for four weeks were subsequently sacrificed and processed for scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The colon contained fecal material combined with psyllium which conformed to the contour of the luminal surface. This mixture formed surface replicas of the intestinal mucosa. These replicas and their related colonic sites were processed for morphologic analysis.


2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Yoshinaga-Itano

Abstract It is possible for children who are deaf or hard of hearing to attain language development comparable to their hearing peers, but these outcomes are not guaranteed. The population of children with hearing loss is a diverse population and although the variable of the age of identification is less variable, there are numerous variables that could potentially and have historically impacted language outcomes of children who are deaf or hard of hearing. Variables such as hearing loss, maternal level of education, and maternal bonding can overcome the benefits of earlier identification and intervention.


VASA ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 126-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathias Kaspar ◽  
Iris Baumgartner ◽  
Daniel Staub ◽  
Heinz Drexel ◽  
Christoph Thalhammer

Abstract. Early detection of vascular damage in atherosclerosis and accurate assessment of cardiovascular risk factors are the basis for appropriate treatment strategies in cardiovascular medicine. The current review focuses on non-invasive ultrasound-based methods for imaging of atherosclerosis. Endothelial dysfunction is an accepted early manifestation of atherosclerosis. The most widely used technique to study endothelial function is non-invasive, flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery under high-resolution ultrasound imaging. Although an increased intima-media thickness value is associated with future cardiovascular events in several large population studies, systematic use is not recommended in clinical practice for risk assessment of individual persons. Carotid plaque analysis with grey-scale median, 3-D ultrasound or contrast-enhanced ultrasound are promising techniques for further scientific work in prevention and therapy of generalized atherosclerosis.


2015 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 247-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gayatri Kotbagi ◽  
Laurence Kern ◽  
Lucia Romo ◽  
Ramesh Pathare

Abstract. Physical exercise when done excessively may have negative consequences on physical and psychological wellbeing. There exist many scales to measure this phenomenon. The purpose of this article is to create a scale measuring the problematic practice of physical exercise (PPPE Scale) by combining two assessment tools already existing in the field of exercise dependency but anchored in different approaches (EDS-R and EDQ). This research consists of three studies carried out on three independent sample populations. The first study (N = 341) tested the construct validity (exploratory factor analysis); the second study (N = 195) tested the structural validity (confirmatory factor analysis) and the third study (N = 104) tested the convergent validity (correlations) of the preliminary version of the PPPE scale. Exploratory factor analysis identified six distinct dimensions associated with exercise dependency. Furthermore, confirmatory factor analysis validated a second order model consisting of 25 items with six dimensions and four sub-dimensions. The convergent validity of this scale with other constructs (GLTEQ, EAT26, and The Big Five Inventory [BFI]) is satisfactory. The preliminary version of the PPPE must be administered to a large population to refine its psychometric properties and develop scoring norms.


Author(s):  
Annie Lang ◽  
Nancy Schwartz ◽  
Sharon Mayell

The study reported here compared how younger and older adults processed the same set of media messages which were selected to vary on two factors, arousing content and valence. Results showed that older and younger adults had similar arousal responses but different patterns of attention and memory. Older adults paid more attention to all messages than did younger adults. However, this attention did not translate into greater memory. Older and younger adults had similar levels of memory for slow-paced messages, but younger adults outperformed older adults significantly as pacing increased, and the difference was larger for arousing compared with calm messages. The differences found are in line with predictions made based on the cognitive-aging literature.


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