Results 51 to 60 of about 2,559 (261)
CEO Managerial Ability and the Strategic Repetition of Climate Disclosures
ABSTRACT This study examines whether CEO managerial ability shapes the repetition of firms' climate‐related disclosures in mandatory 10‐K filings. Climate reporting is highly judgment based and central to firms' broader climate‐risk management strategies, yet little is known about why some firms repeatedly use similar climate narratives and others ...
Javad Rajabalizadeh
wiley +1 more source
Can ISO/IEC 17025 serve as a tool to prevent scientific fraud in chemical research laboratories?
Abstract Scientific fraud has been documented across multiple disciplines, and chemistry is no exception. Recent studies indicate that contamination of materials, methodological errors, and unreliable data, results, or analyses account for over 25% of retracted publications.
Flor Monica Gutierrez‐Alcantara
wiley +1 more source
Firm‐Level Tournament Incentives and Social Decoupling: Evidence From the United States
ABSTRACT This study investigates whether tournament‐based executive incentives exacerbate social decoupling. Using 4468 firm‐year observations from S&P 500 firms between 2010 and 2022, we find that stronger tournament incentives are associated with higher levels of social decoupling. This association is stronger in firms without ESG‐linked compensation,
Mohamed Khalifa +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Multiple Submission, Duplicate Submission and Duplicate Publication
Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). http://publicationethics. org/case/duplicate-submission-manuscript-%E2%80%98plant- and-soil%E2%80%99-plso5942-and-%E2%80%98applied-soil- ecology%E2%80%99-apsoil-d-0 (access: 01 December 2012)
openaire +5 more sources
ABSTRACT Objective Recent growth of online research has been accompanied by an increase in reports of fraudulent participants, which can significantly comprise research validity. Drawing from our experience using Qualtrics with open recruitment, existing literature, and emerging studies in eating disorders (ED), we outline the risk and provide simple ...
Jamie‐Lee Pennesi +2 more
wiley +1 more source
An eye for an eye: ocular motifs and picaresque envisagement in pictures
Conjectures regarding portraits of the Fool as performative hyper-icons in the picaresque tradition initiate an investigation of canny performances of duplicity in pictures on display. The focus falls on performances of unexpected convolutions acted out
Dirk van den Berg
doaj +3 more sources
ABSTRACT Objective Self‐reported frequency measures of social media use (e.g., “How often do you use social media?”) are convenient, yet their criterion validity against objective behavioral data remains largely untested in eating disorder research. We compared self‐reports of TikTok use with objective data extracted from TikTok datafiles.
Scott Griffiths +7 more
wiley +1 more source
This article inquires the relevancy of multiple temporalisations for the discourse analysis of testimonial interviews. Step by step and by help of a range of empirical cases, the author widens the analytical scope (from questions, lines of questions, to ...
Thomas Scheffer
doaj
Blurring the Boundaries: An Investigation of Eating Disorder Recovery Content on TikTok
ABSTRACT Objective Eating disorder recovery content is widely circulated on TikTok. We thematically analyzed recovery content on TikTok, examined its associations with symptom severity among individuals with eating disorders, and assessed its co‐occurrence with pro‐eating disorder material within their TikTok feeds.
Scott Griffiths +12 more
wiley +1 more source
Subordination of related party claims in insolvency: A suggestive framework for Asian regimes
Abstract Related party loans, due to their inherent nature, warrant a higher threshold for scrutiny when compared to loans extended by unrelated parties. Why were these monies advanced as loans, carrying higher priority in insolvency, rather than being invested as share capital?
Aditya Jain, Dhanya Jha, Rebecca Parry
wiley +1 more source

