Digitalization has been the new engine of development that drives the regional economy, but scant empirical studies investigate the linkage between the social sphere digitalization and green total factor productivity (GTFP). Based on the quantitative and comprehensive index of digitalization development, the study calculates the digital economy from the social sphere in China's 279 cities between 2011 and 2019. Besides, the impact of social sphere digitalization on GTFP is examined using the dynamic spatial Durbin model (SDM). The basic results show that the development of the digital economy in the social sphere positively influences the growth of GTFP, and there is a spatial spillover effect. Specifically, the 1% increase in social sphere digitalization will bring a 0.0705% increase in GTFP. Furthermore, influencing mechanisms of the digital economy on GTFP are examined, namely industrial structure upgrading, human capital, and technological invention effects. Last, the heterogeneity analyses show that the influencing intensity is different in Eastern, Middle, and Western cities as well as in resource-based and non-resource-based cities. Our findings provide new evidence for the relationship between the social sphere digitalization and green development, and also give managerial implications for other cities or countries that are seeking energy and emission-reduction measures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115946 | DOI Listing |
Ann Ig
January 2025
Department of Experimental Medicine, University of Salento, Lecce, Complesso Ecotekne, Lecce, Italy.
Background: Correct information is an essential tool to guide thoughts, attitudes, daily choices or more important decisions such as those regarding health. Today, a huge amount of information sources and media is available. Increasing possibilities of obtaining data also require understanding and positioning skills, particularly the ability to navigate the ocean of information and to choose what is best without becoming overwhelmed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDigit Health
January 2025
William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA.
Objective: While endometriosis is estimated to affect 1 in 10 women globally, awareness of the disease as well as research and funding to fight the disease remains lacking as compared with other chronic diseases. This study examines how social media users utilized Instagram to raise awareness of and mobilize activism around endometriosis by analyzing prominent topics, word associations, and feminism themes in endometriosis-tagged posts on Instagram.
Methods: We used a mixed-method approach of combining computational analyses (topic modeling and word association) and human coding (qualitative thematic analysis) of Instagram posts on endometriosis.
Clin Psychol Rev
January 2025
Psychology, Northwestern University, USA.
This article presents a metamorphic model to describe the manifold role of narrative identity, a person's internal life story, across the course of mental illness and personal recovery. First, early adversity and negative co-authoring may contribute to the development of a fragile life story, which itself may combine with life stressors to increase the likelihood of mental illness. Second, mental illness may negatively impact the development of narrative identity, which in turn may exacerbate the devastating effects of mental illness on daily functioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
January 2025
Department of Journalism, Faculty of Communication, Suleyman Demirel University, Isparta, Turkiye.
The rise of solo travel has become a significant trend in the leisure sphere; nonetheless, there is limited understanding of how solo travelers utilize social media throughout their travel process. This lack of insight represents a research problem, as it hinders the ability to enhance solo travel experiences through social media engagement. Addressing this gap, this study investigates the specific ways in which solo leisure travelers experience and engage with social media during their journeys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocal Environ
November 2024
SOPPECOM - Society for Promoting Participative Ecosystem Management, Pune, India.
This paper develops the methodological concept of river co-learning arenas (RCAs) and explores their potential to strengthen innovative grassroots river initiatives, enliven river commons, regenerate river ecologies, and foster greater socio-ecological justice. The integrity of river systems has been threatened in profound ways over the last century. Pollution, damming, canalisation, and water grabbing are some examples of pressures threatening the entwined lifeworlds of human and non-human communities that depend on riverine systems.
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