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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01612840.2025.2476171 | DOI Listing |
Issues Ment Health Nurs
March 2025
School of Nursing, Midwifery & Social Sciences, CQUniversity, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Plant Dis
March 2025
North Carolina State University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Department: Entomology and Plant Pathology, Varsity Research Bldg., Module 3, 1575 Varsity Drive, Suite 1110, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States, 27606;
North Carolina is the seventh-largest producer of blueberries in the United States, with an estimated value of $104.6 million (USDA-NASS). In the Spring of 2024, a patch of approximately 50 contiguous southern highbush blueberries (SHB) (Vaccinium corymbosum cv.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn recent decades, women's representation in power positions has increased alongside a global decline in anti-egalitarian biases. These egalitarian shifts provide the ideal context to examine the boundary conditions of the motivators of group-based inequality. Accordingly, we investigate the possibility that rising gender equality over the last 14 years has attenuated the relationship between group-based (anti-)egalitarianism (namely, social dominance orientation) and system justification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Vet Sci
December 2024
Wageningen Livestock Research, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, Netherlands.
Recently, the Netherlands has shifted toward more welfare-friendly broiler production systems using slower-growing broiler breeds. Early post-hatch feeding (EF) is a dietary strategy that is currently used in commercial broiler production to modulate the gut microbiota and improve performance and welfare. However, there is a knowledge gap in how both breed and EF and their interplay affect gut microbiota composition and diversity, inflammatory status, and broiler behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Conflict Resolut
January 2025
Department of International Relations and Political Science, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, Switzerland.
"Loyalty trials" are common to a range of conflict settings, with consequences that range from harassment to imprisonment, torture, or death. Yet, they have received little if any attention as a general phenomenon in studies of state repression, civil war, or rebel governance, which focus on particular behaviors that authorities use to put people on trial, such as dissent, defection, and resistance. Using a computational model and data on the German Democratic Republic and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, we focus on the dynamics of "loyalty trials" held to identify enemy collaborators-the interaction between expectations, perceptions, and behavior.
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