sensitive behavior
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2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (S4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oksana Stanichenko ◽  
Olena Hnizdilova ◽  
Olha Palekha ◽  
Roman Oleksenko

The purpose of the study is to diagnose the state of older preschool children’s sensitivity formation. The object is the process of older preschool children’s moral education. The study used a set of the following research methods: an analysis, a synthesis, a comparison, a generalization of scientific sources in order to formulate basic concepts and study the level of the issue concern; an observation of children’s play activities; a conversation; a plot role-playing games ‘Hospital’ and ‘Veterinary Clinic,’ a didactic game ‘Who is sensitive?’; methods of mathematical statistics for processing the obtained experimental data. Analysis of the experimental study results allowed us to state the lack of older preschool children’s awareness with the category ‘sensitivity’ and its emotional and activity display. The vast majority of preschoolers understand the theoretical meaning of this category, however, they do not realize the need to be sensitive, can not explain the motives of their sensitive behavior, and are not able to name the sensitive actions of other people. Only a small number of children associate sensitive actions with care, protection, and help. We have noted the highest rate of the emotional and value component development because children tend to show moral feelings.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 2291
Author(s):  
Muddasir Nawaz ◽  
Nazal Naeem ◽  
Ramazan Kahraman ◽  
M. F. Montemor ◽  
W. Haider ◽  
...  

The search for highly effective corrosion protection solutions to avoid degradation of the metallic parts is enabling the development of polymeric organic coatings. Of particular relevance, polymeric nanocomposite coatings, modified with corrosion inhibitors, have been developed to provide enhanced surface protection. In this work, yttrium oxide nanoparticles loaded with corrosion inhibitor (Imidazole), used as additives in the formulation of epoxy for coated on the steel substrate. The loading of Y2O3 with imidazole was confirmed by field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM) and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and Brunauer–Emmett–Teller analysis. UV-Vis analysis demonstrated the pH-sensitive behavior of the imidazole that helps in self-release when necessary. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) of the coated samples revealed that the coating modified with Y2O3/IMD provides better corrosion protection compared to coatings containing only Y2O3. XPS analysis validated the presence of an imidazole protective film on the steel substrate that enhanced the corrosion resistance of the coated samples


2021 ◽  
pp. 152808372110342
Author(s):  
Xinghua Hong ◽  
Rufang Yu ◽  
Yubing Dong ◽  
Junmin Wan ◽  
Hongxia Zhang ◽  
...  

Electric fabric heaters have demonstrated potential applications in a wide range of fields for medical electrothermal, human healthcare and athletic rehabilitation. Whereas, little attention has been paid to the resistance variations and the interface of electric heaters. Here, this paper focuses on the resistance temperature-sensitive behavior and interfacial electricity of reduced graphene oxide (RGO)/polyester (PET) fabrics, which are obatained through a facile and scalable dip-coating method. When a current of 0.055 ampere (A) is applied, the RGO/PET fabric can achieve an equilibrium temperature about 89 °C in 20 s, with a maximum heating rate of 11.78 °C/s. Besides, the relative resistance changes of RGO/PET fabric are linearly related to the temperature. When the RGO/PET fabric reaches its steady-state temperature of 89 °C, the value of ΔR/R0 drops by ∼30%, showing that the fabric is endowed with temperature sensitivity. These prominent results indicate that the RGO/PET fabric owns great promise in the field of wearable electric heaters. Notably, the contact resistance at the interface of RGO/PET fabric heater is investigated and the mechanism of the temperature in middle part of heater is higher than that of both ends is analyzed. This provides a qualitative decoupling analysis method for the study and analysis of interfacial electricity and electrothermal distribution of carbon materials.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Farrell ◽  
Preston Vock ◽  
Thomas C . Rogers

2021 ◽  
pp. 104533
Author(s):  
Saima Arshed ◽  
Nauman Raza ◽  
Riaz Ur Rahman ◽  
Asma Rashid Butt ◽  
Wen-Hua Huang

2021 ◽  
pp. 004912412199552
Author(s):  
Rainer Schnell ◽  
Kathrin Thomas

This article provides a meta-analysis of studies using the crosswise model (CM) in estimating the prevalence of sensitive characteristics in different samples and populations. On a data set of 141 items published in 33 either articles or books, we compare the difference (Δ) between estimates based on the CM and a direct question (DQ). The overall effect size of Δ is 4.88; 95% CI [4.56, 5.21]. The results of a meta-regression indicate that Δ is smaller when general populations and nonprobability samples are considered. The population effect suggests an education effect: Differences between the CM and DQ estimates are more likely to occur when highly educated populations, such as students, are studied. Our findings raise concerns to what extent the CM is able to improve estimates of sensitive behavior in general population samples.


MethodsX ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 101330
Author(s):  
Afolarin O. Ogungbemi ◽  
Elisabet Teixido ◽  
Riccardo Massei ◽  
Stefan Scholz ◽  
Eberhard Küster

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soheil Ghili ◽  
Peter Klibanoff

Consider a canonical problem in choice under uncertainty: choosing from a convex feasible set consisting of all (Anscombe–Aumann) mixtures of two acts f and g, [Formula: see text]. We propose a preference condition, monotonicity in optimal mixtures, which says that surely improving the act f (in the sense of weak dominance) makes the optimal weight(s) on f weakly higher. We use a stylized model of a sales agent reacting to incentives to illustrate the tight connection between monotonicity in optimal mixtures and a monotone comparative static of interest in applications. We then explore more generally the relation between this condition and preferences exhibiting ambiguity-sensitive behavior as in the classic Ellsberg paradoxes. We find that monotonicity in optimal mixtures and ambiguity aversion (even only local to an event) are incompatible for a large and popular class of ambiguity-sensitive preferences (the c-linearly biseparable class. This implies, for example, that maxmin expected utility preferences are consistent with monotonicity in optimal mixtures if and only if they are subjective expected utility preferences. This incompatibility is not between monotonicity in optimal mixtures and ambiguity aversion per se. For example, we show that smooth ambiguity preferences can satisfy both properties as long as they are not too ambiguity averse. Our most general result, applying to an extremely broad universe of preferences, shows a sense in which monotonicity in optimal mixtures places upper bounds on the intensity of ambiguity-averse behavior. This paper was accepted by Manel Baucells, decision analysis.


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