Results 201 to 210 of about 14,914 (306)

Strong‐Ties and Weak‐Ties Rationalities: Predicting Public Stigma, Support Networks, and Health Behaviours During the COVID‐19 Pandemic Across Four Societies

open access: yesInternational Journal of Psychology, Volume 61, Issue 4, August 2026.
ABSTRACT In this study, we test the theory of strong‐ties and weak‐ties rationalities (STWTR) (Sundararajan 2020) and the criterion validity of its measures using strong‐ties rationality and weak‐ties rationality scales to predict COVID‐19 related perceptions and behaviours.
Rachel Sing‐Kiat Ting   +7 more
wiley   +1 more source

God's Presence in the Aisle: How God Salience Encourages Preference for Ultra‐Processed Foods

open access: yesPsychology &Marketing, Volume 43, Issue 8, Page 1859-1877, August 2026.
ABSTRACT God‐related cues are pervasive in consumers' daily lives, yet little research has examined how God salience shapes consumer food choices. Drawing on compensatory control theory and the literature on symbolic healing, we present findings from six studies, including a field experiment, demonstrating that high (vs.
Ali Gohary, Hean Tat Keh
wiley   +1 more source

<i>De novo</i> assembly and functional annotation of Henbit (<i>Lamium amplexicaule</i>) transcriptome. [PDF]

open access: yesFront Genet
Choi YJ   +9 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Knocking Off the Street: The Subversive Writings of Hong Kong's Grassroots Kings

open access: yesCity &Society, Volume 38, Issue 2, August 2026.
ABSTRACT This article examines how two grassroots street artists in Hong Kong, the King of Kowloon (Tsang Tsou‐choi) and the Plumber King (Yim Chiu‐tong), intervene in the city's everyday visual order. Moving beyond celebratory collective memory narratives and easy analogies to graffiti, it frames their works as subversive urban practices that rework ...
Shizheng Liang, Zihong Zhang
wiley   +1 more source

Extending Māori Concepts in Secondary School Geography

open access: yesNew Zealand Geographer, Volume 82, Issue 2, August 2026.
ABSTRACT Secondary school geography brings together tāngata (people) and whenua (land), the central concepts of te ao Māori (the Māori world). Therefore, geography is ideally placed to respond to calls for mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge) to gain “equal status” with Western knowledge.
Karen Finn   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

“We Take the Whip and Work”: Matrix of Racialized and Gendered Work in Cybersecurity

open access: yesSociological Inquiry, Volume 96, Issue 3, August 2026.
Bringing the theories of gendered and racialized organizations into conversation with research on immigration and racialization, this paper offers an intersectional understanding of the experiences of immigrant workers of color in cybersecurity. Building on interviews with 50 foreign‐born workers of color in Canada, we examine how workers perceive ...
Sepideh Borzoo   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

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