Results 151 to 160 of about 9,047 (294)
ABSTRACT Climate change is reshaping everyday life in Ghana through coastal erosion, flooding, erratic rainfall, water scarcity, extreme heat, and agricultural insecurity. This study examines how these changes produce stress, trauma, and gendered resilience among women in Salakope and Choggu Yapalsi, two climate‐vulnerable communities in coastal and ...
Jacob Kwakye
wiley +1 more source
Quantum chaos in the Benjamini-Schramm limit
One of the fundamental problems in quantum chaos is to understand how high-frequency waves behave in chaotic environments. A famous but vague conjecture of Michael Berry predicts that they should look on small scales like Gaussian random waves.
Le Masson, Etienne
core
Unnatural Causes: Cryptocurrencies, Carbon Credits, and the rise of Neoliberalism from Below
ABSTRACT Klima is a carbon‐backed cryptocurrency running as a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO). In 2021, it had accumulated 9 million metric tons of digital carbon credits and reached a market value of more than US$1 billion. In 2023, its treasury stored twice as many carbon credits, but its spot price was a tiny fraction compared to 2021 ...
Riccardo De Cristano, Alexander Paulsson
wiley +1 more source
Micro‐transitions and work identity: The case of academic entrepreneurs
Abstract Research Summary This paper examines how academic entrepreneurs—scientists who found research‐based startups while remaining in academia—construct and sustain their professional identities amid frequent transitions between academic and entrepreneurial roles.
Marouane Bousfiha, Henrik Berglund
wiley +1 more source
Exploiting Device Deformability for Fluid and Particle Manipulation
Deformable devices enable fluid and particle manipulation modes that are inaccessible to rigid platforms. This review examines soft materials and architectures that translate controlled deformation into microscale fluid operations such as pumping, valving, mixing, and particle handling.
Zhiyang Hong +4 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Diagnosing high‐impedance ground faults (HIGFs) in distribution networks is extremely challenging because high transition resistance significantly reduces electrical signal strength and unpredictable initial fault phase angles coupled with asymmetric voltage disturbances often lead to misclassification.
Zhengyang Li +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Thriving or Drained? The Dual Effects of AI‐autonomy on Workers’ Performance Outcomes
Abstract Interest in the role of artificial intelligence (AI) within organizations has surged in recent years. However, we know little about the underlying mechanisms that connect AI usage in organizations to employee job outcomes. Drawing on self‐determination theory and self‐categorization theory, this study explores when and how perceived AI ...
Muhammad Imran Rasheed +3 more
wiley +1 more source
The characterisation of chaos in low dimensional spaces [PDF]
This work attempts to characterise some of the complicated behaviour that is observed in many non-linear systems. For example, the frontispiece was generated by iterations of a two dimensional area-preserving mapping (the Chirikov map) that is typical
McCreadie, Geoffrey Alexander
core
Abstract The Labour manifesto in this year's election implied a radical restructuring of the UK state, the way in which England is governed and in relations across the United Kingdom. The aim of making English devolution the ‘default option’ is set against fifty years of unsuccessful and partial devolution initiatives which have failed to reverse the ...
John Denham, Janice Morphet
wiley +1 more source
Abstract In this article, the key dilemmas that will confront the new Labour administration in Britain during its initial period in power are examined. The Starmer government is seeking to use the state pragmatically to improve British economic performance, stem the crisis in public services and strengthen the strategic capacity of Whitehall.
Patrick Diamond +2 more
wiley +1 more source

