Results 171 to 180 of about 494,403 (215)
“I Paid A Bribe”—Lessons and Insights From Crowdsourced Corruption Reporting in India
ABSTRACT Preventing and reducing corruption has proven to be an enormous challenge. An important step in this process is to produce and use good metrics to identify where anti‐corruption resources would be most beneficial. Most measures of corruption, however, rely on surveys of perceptions or bribery incidence.
Ina Kubbe +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Perceptional Welfare Boundary for Migrant Families in China: What, Where and How?
ABSTRACT Despite recent reforms to China's hukou system, internal migrants in urban centres continue to face significant barriers in accessing welfare benefits and public services. This study introduces the concept of the perceptional welfare boundary to explain how welfare exclusion persists beyond formal institutional constraints.
Qiaobing Wu, Shirley Yang
wiley +1 more source
Task and Timing Effects in Argument Role Sensitivity: Evidence From Production, EEG, and Computational Modeling. [PDF]
Nakamura M +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Follow Me Into Math: Near‐Peer Influencers Take the Stage
ABSTRACT Young people like to be entertained, and to entertain others. What if students were to invest enough of their time and effort into learning topics from our mathematics courses to become experts in the eyes of their peers? In this study we positioned college students and high school students as mathematical performers on the stage in front of ...
Aaron T. Wilson +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Mushrooms are a ubiquitous and essential component in our biological environment and have been of interest to humans around the globe for millennia. Knowledge about mushrooms represents a prime example of cumulative culture, one of the key processes in human evolution.
Andrea Bender, Åge Oterhals
wiley +1 more source
Metabolomic Investigation of β-Thalassemia in Chorionic Villi Samples. [PDF]
Monni G +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
The transportation of embedded inversion in world Englishes
Abstract The present study uses private correspondence to investigate the use of embedded inversion on both sides of the Atlantic as an illustration of the spread of spoken/conversational features through writing. The paper discusses the use of embedded inversion in Irish English (IrE) and briefly compares its occurrence in other varieties of English ...
Carolina P. Amador‐Moreno
wiley +1 more source
An acoustic study on monophthongs in Central Australian Aboriginal English
Abstract We present an acoustic analysis of monophthongal vowel production in Central Australian Aboriginal English (CAAE), providing one of the first systematic examinations of this variety spoken by English‐as‐a‐first‐language (L1) speakers in Mparntwe/Alice Springs, Australia.
Yizhou Wang +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Clarifying the unseen: Assessment workload and time expectations for students in higher education
Abstract Transparency in assessment workload in higher education remains underexplored in research and policy. Students can only develop deep learning strategies and avoid surface learning when they have clear expectations about distribution of assessment workload and the required time investments. This study combines a scoping review of 50 articles to
Astrid Kramer +2 more
wiley +1 more source

