Results 81 to 90 of about 91,019 (215)
Abstract As artificial intelligence (AI) reshapes the educational landscape, promoting AI literacy in secondary education has become increasingly important. Understanding how secondary students perceive AI, particularly the machine learning (ML) decision‐making process, is critical for equipping them to navigate an AI‐driven future.
Liu Dong +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Placing Children in Residential Care: A Scoping Review of Decision‐Making and Matching Criteria
ABSTRACT Placement decisions in residential care (RC) represent one of the most challenging aspects of child protection services. While often framed as a last‐resort solution, RC aims to serve children whose needs are not met through family‐based interventions and is used differently across countries.
Chiara Monti
wiley +1 more source
Conversational AI Agents: The Effect of Process and Outcome Variation on Anthropomorphism and Trust
ABSTRACT Organisations increasingly deploy conversational AI agents (CAs) in agentic roles where behavioural variations are inevitable. Prior work often conflates two distinct forms of variation: outcome variation (where success fluctuates) and process variation (where the path to completion varies).
Kambiz Saffarizadeh, Mark Keil
wiley +1 more source
Barriers and facilitators to oral healthcare support in gestational diabetes mellitus: An interview study with healthcare professionals. [PDF]
Abstract Aim Periodontitis is a chronic inflammatory oral disease characterised by the persistent activation of immune cells, which contributes to insulin resistance and, consequently, an increased risk of systemic diseases, including gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). At the same time, the risk of periodontitis is higher in individuals with diabetes,
Kristensen CB +3 more
europepmc +2 more sources
Induction and Recursion Principles in a Higher-Order Quantitative Logic for Probability
Quantitative logic reasons about the degree to which formulas are satisfied. This paper studies the fundamental reasoning principles of higher-order quantitative logic and their application to reasoning about probabilistic programs and processes. We construct an affine calculus for $1$-bounded complete metric spaces and the monad for probability ...
Bacci, Giorgio +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
Bank Opacity and Safe Asset Moneyness
Abstract A bank is more effective as a supplier of money‐like safe assets when (i) its return on equity (ROE) is relatively lower and (ii) it is relatively more opaque about its balance sheet. A model is presented to support this, emphasizing that safe asset investors focus on the left tail of the collateral value distribution.
SANG RAE KIM
wiley +1 more source
Know Your Lanes: Unpacking Theoretical Plurality Across Studies of Professions
Abstract Professions continue to be central to understanding organizing in the 21st century. The literature on professions is segmented into theoretical conversations that offer different conceptualizations of professions and theoretical concerns. Through an analysis of the literature, we unpack four lanes – teleological, institutional, ecological, and
Ruthanne Huising, Pauli Pakarinen
wiley +1 more source
Artificial Intelligence as an Organizing Capability Arising from Human‐Algorithm Relations
Abstract In this article, we move beyond the prevailing view of artificial intelligence (AI) as an independent entity within organizations, which, we argue, risks obscuring potential explanations of the effects of AI on organizing. Drawing on posthumanism, we propose an ontological shift in conceptualizing AI.
Marta Stelmaszak +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The question ‘Was Copernicus an astrologer’ is prima facie very clear, while in fact being quite ambiguous. This question should rather be regarded as a vast topic covering lots of more concise questions such as ‘Was Copernicus thoroughly educated in ...
George Borski, Ivan Kolkov
doaj
Challenges of Semiotic Abduction in Management Research
Abstract This Counterpoint challenges Fleming and Oswick’s (2025) Point paper and their notion of loosely coupled abduction. Whereas their Point emphasizes how abductive theorizing can balance creativity and rigor through consensus‐based plausibility, we argue that this very reliance on consensus carries epistemic risks.
Igor Filatotchev +3 more
wiley +1 more source

