Browsing by Subject "social sciences"
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Publication2. Opportunities and challenges of utilizing personality traits for personalization in HCI(De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2019)
;Völkel, S. T. ;Schödel, R. ;Buschek, D. ;Au, Q. ;Bischl, B. ;Bühner, M.Hussmann, H.This chapter discusses main opportunities and challenges of assessing and utilizing personality traits in personalized interactive systems and services. This unique perspective arises from our long-term collaboration on research projects involving three groups on human-computer interaction (HCI), psychology, and statistics. Currently, personalization in HCI is often based on past user behavior, preferences, and interaction context. We argue that personality traits provide a promising additional source of information for personalization, which goes beyond context- and device-specific behavior and preferences. We first give an overview of the well-established Big Five personality trait model from psychology. We then present previous findings on the influence of personality in HCI associated with the benefits and challenges of personalization. These findings include the preference for interactive systems, filtering of information to increase personal relevance, communication behavior, and the impact on trust and acceptance. Moreover, we present first approaches of personality-based recommender systems. We then identify several opportunities and use cases for personality-aware personalization: (i) personal communication between users, (ii) recommendations upon first use, (iii) persuasive technology, (iv) trust and comfort in autonomous vehicles, and (v) empathic intelligent systems. Furthermore, we highlight main challenges. First, we point out technological challenges of personality computing. To benefit from personality awareness, systems need to automatically assess the user’s personality. To create empathic intelligent agents (e. g., voice assistants), a consistent personality has to be synthesized. Second, personality-aware personalization raises questions about user concerns and views, particularly privacy and data control. Another challenge is acceptance and trust in personality-aware systems due to the sensitivity of the data. Moreover, the importance of an accurate mental model for users’ trust in a system was recently underlined by the right for explanations in the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation. Such considerations seem particularly relevant for systems that assess and utilize personality. Finally, we examine methodological requirements such as the need for large sample sizes and appropriate measurements. We conclude with a summary of opportunities and challenges of personality-aware personalization and discuss future research questions.Type: book section -
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Publication5th Consumer Barometer of Renewable Energy in Cooperation with RaiffeisenType: conference contribution
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Publication6th Consumer Barometer of Renewable Energy in Cooperation with RaiffeisenType: conference contribution
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PublicationA behavioral economics perspective on the overjustification effect: Crowding-in and crowding-out of intrinsic motivation.In the last two decades, economic motivation research has undergone a paradigm shift when it comes to the effect of incentive schemes on individual performance and motivation. Inspired by self-determination theory, a new branch in economics evolved called behavioral economics. Especially by evidencing the negative effect of “pay-for-performance” on intrinsic motivation, called the “crowding-out” or “overjustification” effect, it challenges the economic paradigm of the relative price-effect and its inherent belief in incentives as universal remedy for motivation and individual performance. This article reviews the findings of behavioral economics on motivation. Drawing on these results we discuss which institutional conditions strengthen rather than weaken intrinsic motivation. We demonstrate that fairness, participation, market-driven wages, and normatively affected decision-making contexts have a positive effect on intrinsic motivation.Type: book section
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PublicationA Biased "Radical" or a False Choice?( 2021-03-16)Type: journal articleJournal: Constructivist FoundationsVolume: 16Issue: 3
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PublicationA Cartography of Qualitative Research in SwitzerlandOur attempt to describe the state of qualitative research in Switzerland starts out with an impressionist sketch which inevitably is selective, subjective and culturally biased. In order to reach a more objective stance, we gather some facts and figures and present them by means of descriptive statistics. Based on the database of the Swiss Information and Data Archive Service for the Social Sciences (SIDOS), we analyze a sample of qualitative, sociological research projects funded by national science foundations (Swiss, German and French) between 1995-2004. We compare qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods projects and try to find similarities, differences and trends: Has the ratio of qualitative research projects increased over the last ten years? Can we find cultural differences, e.g. a preference of German or French Swiss researchers for either qualitative or quantitative or mixed methods designs? Do different types of institutions, or do men and women have such different preferences? Which methods are prevailing in Swiss qualitative research? In a second data set collected by a survey of our own, we broaden the perspective to other disciplines and try to identify the most commonly used methods and theoretical approaches. But we have also obtained individual portraits of the qualitative researchers in Switzerland with their preferences of theoretical approaches and methods, their expertise, their research and their teaching courses.Type: journal articleJournal: Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research (Online-Journal)Volume: 6Issue: 3
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PublicationA Century of Futurism: 1909-2009( 2009)
;Somigli, LucaSomigli, LucaThe Futurist movement marked a crucial rupture within European literature and art. For all its political and cultural contradictions, Italian Futurism called into question all aspects of literary and artistic production, from the sacrality and eternalness of the work of art to the privileged role of the artist and the passivity of the reader and the spectator.Type: bookVolume: 27 -
PublicationA Circular Economy within the planetary boundaries: towards a resource-based, systemic approach(Elsevier, 2020-04-04)
;Design, Harald ;Brunner, Dunia ;Nahrath, StephaneHirschier, RolandType: journal articleJournal: Resources, Conservation and RecyclingVolume: 155 -
PublicationA Cluster-Randomized Trial on Small Incentives to Promote Physical Activity( 2019-01-17)
;Scholz, UrteIntroduction: There has been limited research investigating whether small financial incentives can promote participation, behaviour change, and engagement in physical activity promotion programs. This study evaluates the effects of two types of small financial incentives within a physical activity promotion program of a Swiss health insurance company. Study Design: Three-arm cluster-randomized trial comparing small personal financial incentives and charity financial incentives (10 Swiss Francs, equal to $10.4) for each month with an average step count of at least 10,000 steps per day) to control. Insurees' federal state of residence was the unit of randomization. We collected data in 2015 and completed the analyses in 2018. Setting/participants: We invited German-speaking insurees of a large health insurer in Switzerland. Invited insurees were aged ≥ 18 years, enrolled in complementary insurance plans and registered on the insurer's online platform. Main outcome measures: Primary outcome was the participation rate. Secondary outcomes were steps per day, participant days that more than 10,000 steps were achieved and non-usage attrition over the first three months of the program. Results: Participation rate was 5.94% in the personal financial incentive group (OR: 1.96; 95% CI: 1.55 to 2.49) and 4.98% in the charity financial incentive group (OR: 1.59; 95% CI: 1.25 to 2.01) compared to 3.23% in the control group. At the start of the program, the charity financial group had a 12% higher chance to walk 10,000 steps per day than the control group (OR: 1.68; 95% CI: 1.23 to 2.30), but this effect dissipated after three months. Steps per day and non-usage attrition did not differ significantly between the groups. Conclusions: Small personal and charity financial incentives can increase participation in physical activity promotion programs. Incentives may need to be modified in order to prevent attrition and promote behaviour change over a longer period of time.Type: journal articleJournal: American Journal of Preventive MedicineVolume: 56Issue: 2 -
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PublicationA Competence Development Framework for Learning and Teaching System DynamicsCurrent teaching and learning of system dynamics is based on materials derived from the expertise of masters. However, there is little explicit reference to the stages which beginners go through to become proficient nor what is learned at each of these stages. We argue that this hinders cumulative research and development in teaching and learning strategies. We engaged 15 acknowledged masters in the field to take part in a three-round Delphi study to develop an operational representation of the competence development stages and what is learned at each stage. The resulting system dynamics competence framework consists of a qualified, expert-evaluated, empirically based set of seven skills and 265 learning outcomes. The skills provide a common orientation, in the language of current educational research, to facilitate research, course design and certification efforts to ensure quality standards. To conclude this paper provides avenues for future work.
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PublicationA conceptual framework for elucidating how agency shapes destabilization of socio-technical systems( 2019-06-27)
;Duygan, Mert ;Kachi, AyaType: conference paper -
PublicationA Conversation with Gernot Grabher: InterviewType: journal issue (edt.)Journal: economic sociology, the european electronic newsletterVolume: 9Issue: 3
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PublicationA Critical Agenda of Entrepreneurship Studies: From Dystopian Oppression to Heterotopian Emancipation(University of Manchester, 2013-07-12)
;Verduyn, Karen ;Tedmanson, DeirdreEssers, CarolineThis paper examines entrepreneurship in its relationship to criticalness. Though conceding that ‘critical' is a slippery term without a singular meaning, we contend that an explicitly critical agenda of entrepreneurship is needed to decenter the commonsense which notoriously prevents us from understanding entrepreneurship outside of the ‘hegemony of the positive' (Bill, Olaison & Sorensen, forthcoming). Critical is hence used here as a sensitizing concept to emphasize entrepreneurship's assumed role in overcoming extant relations of exploitation, domination and oppression. So far, critical approaches have been instrumental for creating insights into how entrepreneurship is connected with, for instance, the favoring of sectional interests, the ideological support of capitalist hegemony or the selective appropriation of profits. However, whilst this ‘dark side' approach has gained some currency in entrepreneurship studies (Spicer, 2012), it is our conviction that critical analyses must also comprise a commitment to how entrepreneurship can bring about new openings for liberating forms of individual and collective existence. Consequently, following the example of Rindova, Barry and Ketchen's (2009) special issue on ‘Entrepreneuring as Emancipation', we sketch out a critical agenda of entrepreneurship research based on different conceptualizations of emancipation. Concretely, drawing on Laclau's (1996) dualism of emancipation - oppression, we chart four forms of emancipation, and in line with these, four forms of critical entrepreneurship research. Based on illustrations from the extant literature, we demonstrate how each perspective champions a different conclusion with regard to what the emancipatory or oppressive potential of entrepreneurship may consist of.Type: conference paper -
PublicationA critical discourse analysis of news headlines on Lula’s corruption case in leading newspapers in Brazil [Un análisis crítico del discurso en los titulares de noticias sobre el caso de corrupción de Lula en los principales periódicos de Brasil]This study investigates the way Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s corruption case is represented in the leading newspapers in Brazil. In line with theoretical perspective of Hector Borrat (1989; 2006) regarding the influence of newspapers in political systems, and by employing Fairclough’s (1995a) critical discourse analysis model and a number of analytical tools from Richardson (2007), the study examines the news headlines on the issue, published by two major Brazilian newspapers of national circulation, O Globo and Folha de S.Paulo, in order to determine the level of participation of each newspaper in the political conflict and how language is used to reflect specific ideologies. This step-by-step analysis of the case provides a critical review of the fundamental journalistic strategies. This research analyses the journalistic pieces of aforementioned newspapers over 29 months, from the beginning of the accusations against Lula (November 2015) until the definitive arrest of the Brazilian ex-president (April 2018), in interdisciplinary perspective of media and politics. The findings of the study indicate that both newspapers, with less proportion in Folha de S.Paulo, tend to present a negative image of the Brazilian ex-president when covering his conviction case by commenting on the conflict. The results provide evidence to support the idea that newspapers, considered as validators of information, do not simply reflect the social reality as it is, and yet they try to impose their ideologies in representing events.Type: journal articleJournal: Revista de Comunicación de la SEECIVolume: 52