Search

Results: 145
Walking blindfolded unveils unique contributions of behavioural approach and inhibition to lateral spatial bias.
Healthy individuals display a tendency to allocate attention unequally across space, and this bias has implications for how individuals interact with their environments. However, the origins of this phenomenon remain relatively...
Published by:
Modeling Inner Proton Belt Variability at Energies 1 to 10 MeV Using BAS-PRO
Abstract: Geomagnetically trapped protons forming Earth's proton radiation belt pose a hazard to orbiting spacecraft. In particular, solar cell degradation is caused by non‐ionising collisions with protons at energies of several...
Published by:
Effective and Efficient Classification of Topically-Enriched Domain-Specific Text Snippets
Marco Spruit, Bas Vlug
Jul 01, 2015
Due to the explosive growth in the amount of text snippets over the past few years and their sparsity of text, organizations are unable to effectively and efficiently classify them, missing out on business opportunities. This...
Habit and climate change
Many climate-relevant behaviours are habitual. Habits are memory-based propensities to respond automatically to specific cues, acquired by repetition of behaviours in stable contexts. Socio-cognitive models are widely used to...
Published by:
Making Sense of Sustainability
This article investigated what the term “sustainability” meant to a group of proenvironmental people living in Peterborough, in the east of England. The data was collected and analyzed using Interpretative Phenomenological...
Published by:
On the nature of eco-anxiety
Three studies investigated habitual worry about global warming as an example of 'eco-anxiety'. The key question was whether such worrying is constructive (a motivated pro-environmental response) or unconstructive (a symptom of...
Published by:
Making Sense of Sustainability
This article investigated what the term “sustainability” meant to a group of proenvironmental people living in Peterborough, in the east of England. The data was collected and analyzed using Interpretative Phenomenological...
Published by:
The maximal degree in random recursive graphs with random weights
We study a generalisation of the random recursive tree (RRT) model and its multigraph counterpart, the uniform directed acyclic graph (DAG). Here, vertices are equipped with a random vertex-weight representing initial...
Published by:
A phase transition for preferential attachment models with additive fitness
Preferential attachment models form a popular class of growing networks, where Preferential attachment models form a popular class of growing networks, where incoming vertices are preferably connected to vertices with high...
Published by:
A phase transition for preferential attachment models with additive fitness
Preferential attachment models form a popular class of growing networks, where Preferential attachment models form a popular class of growing networks, where incoming vertices are preferably connected to vertices with high...
Published by:
Habit and climate change
Many climate-relevant behaviours are habitual. Habits are memory-based propensities to respond automatically to specific cues, acquired by repetition of behaviours in stable contexts. Socio-cognitive models are widely used to...
Published by:
The maximal degree in random recursive graphs with random weights
We study a generalisation of the random recursive tree (RRT) model and its multigraph counterpart, the uniform directed acyclic graph (DAG). Here, vertices are equipped with a random vertex-weight representing initial...
Published by:

|<

<

1

2

3

4

5

>

>|