A brief universal parenting program for recently settled immigrants in Sweden: a feasibility study. [PDF]
Västhagen M +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Complementarities of occupations and language skills of immigrants in Europe. [PDF]
Tóth P, Vitáloš M.
europepmc +1 more source
Enhancing hospital workforce planning, scheduling, and performance evaluation through an AI-driven human resource management system. [PDF]
Wang Y, Zheng P, Guan Y, Zhang Q.
europepmc +1 more source
Human rights violations are associated with forcibly displaced population's mental health-a systematic review and meta-analysis. [PDF]
Sisenop F +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Co-creating an antenatal care information resource in Arabic with re-settled migrant mothers. [PDF]
Lie MLS, Claisse C.
europepmc +1 more source
Using normalisation process theory to identify factors facilitating the scaling up of parenting programs for immigrant parents. [PDF]
Osman F, Schön UK, Salari R.
europepmc +1 more source
Post-migration stress mediates associations between potentially traumatic peri-migration experiences and mental health among Middle Eastern refugees in Germany. [PDF]
El-Awad U +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
A hybrid CNN and reinforcement learning framework for speaker identification using Mel-Spectrogram and continuous wavelet transform features. [PDF]
Heir FM, Najafzadeh H, Erfani S.
europepmc +1 more source
Clause Combining, Ergativity, and Coreferent Deletion in Kurmanji
A distinction is commonly made between morphological or surface ergativity, and syntactic or deep ergativity, based on what Dixon has termed the "pivot" behavior (S/A vs. S/O) of a language. Since marked constructions enable an S/A pivot to function even in some deep ergative languages, deep or syntactic ergativity might be interpreted as gradational ...
Yaron Matras
exaly +4 more sources
Mutual intelligibility of a Kurmanji and a Zazaki dialect spoken in the province of Elazığ, Turkey
We present the first results of a large project concerned with the mutual intelligibility between Zazaki and Kurmanji dialects spoken in Eastern Anatolia. There is an ongoing debate on the classification of Kurmanji and Zazaki as separate languages or as
Bilgit Saglam, Charlotte Gooskens
exaly +3 more sources

