A. Goldberg
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Menampilkan 20 dari ~805190 hasil · dari arXiv, DOAJ, Semantic Scholar, CrossRef
S. Card, J. Mackinlay, B. Shneiderman
R. Eberhart, Yuhui Shi
R. Graham, E. Lawler, J. Lenstra et al.
G. Becker
Preface to the Enlarged Edition Introduction 1. Single-Person Households 2. Division of Labor in Households and Families Supplement: Human Capital, Effort, and the Sexual Division of Labor 3. Polygamy and Monogamy in Marriage Markets 4. Assortative Mating in Marriage Markets 5. The Demand for Children Supplement: A Reformulation of the Economic Theory of Fertility 6. Family Background and the Opportunities of Children 7. Inequality and Intergenerational Mobility Supplement: Human Capital and the Rise and Fall of Families 8. Altruism in the Family 9. Families in Nonhuman Species 10. Imperfect Information, Marriage, and Divorce 11. The Evolution of the Family Supplement: The Family and the State Bibliography Index
P. Pierson
Kalliopi Nikolopoulou, Giorgio Agamben, D. Heller-Roazen
B. Street
Chris Weedon
O. A. Ladyzhenskai︠a︡, V. Solonnikov, N. N. Uralʹt︠s︡eva
Philip H. Ramsey
R. Harrington
G. McLachlan
Adi Ben-Israel, T. Greville
C. Pateman
1. Recent theories of democracy and the 'classical myth' 2. Rousseau, John Stuart Mill and G. D. H. Cole: a participatory theory of democracy 3. The sence of political efficacy and participation in the workplace 4. 'Participation' and 'democracy' in industry 5. Workers' self-management in Yugoslavia 6. Conclusions Bibliography Index.
Paul Martin, P. Bateson
P. Billingsley
Petar Milovanovic, Tatjana Pekmezovic, Marija Djuric
Universities and journals increasingly rely on software tools for detecting textual overlap of a scientific text with the previously published literature to detect potential plagiarism. Although software outputs need to be carefully reviewed by competent humans to verify the existence of plagiarism, university and journal staff, for various reasons, often erroneously interpret the degree of plagiarism based on the percentage of textual overlap shown in the similarity report. This is often accompanied by explicit recommendations to the author(s) to paraphrase the text to achieve an “acceptable” percentage of overlap. Here, based on the available literature and real-world examples from similarity reports, we provide a classification with extensive examples of phrases that falsely inflate the similarity index and argue the futility and dangers of rephrasing such statements just for the sake of reducing the similarity index. The examples provided in this paper call for a more reasonable assessment of text similarity. To fully endorse the principles of academic integrity and prevent loss of clarity of the scientific literature, we believe it is important to shift from pure bureaucratic and quantificational view on the originality of scientific texts to human-centered qualitative assessment of the manuscripts, including the software outputs.
Diah Sri Rejeki, Haria Saputry Wahyuni, Nor Zaina Zaharah Mohd Ariff
This study investigates the cross-cultural perceptions of Indonesian and Malaysian students regarding the virtual literacy tourism services offered by the National Library of the Republic of Indonesia. As part of ongoing digital transformation efforts in the literacy sector, these virtual tour services provide an alternative means of accessing information and promoting cultural heritage. The purpose of this research is to analyze perceptual differences between the two student groups using user experience theory, which encompasses cognitive, affective, and cultural dimensions. A quantitative comparative design was employed, involving a purposive sample of 100 participants, 50 students from Indonesia and 50 students from Malaysia. Data were collected through an online questionnaire using a 5-point Likert scale and analyzed through descriptive statistics and independent sample t-tests. The findings reveal that, overall, there are no significant differences between the two groups across most indicators. However, a notable distinction appears in the affective dimension, specifically the sense of presence, which is higher among Malaysian respondents. These results indicate that user experience is shaped by cultural context and highlight the potential of virtual library tours to foster cross-cultural engagement and understanding.
S. M. Stishov
Review of the author's data, partly still unpublished, on studying of liquid tellurium and cesium are given. No proofs indicating phase transitions in liquids were found. New developments in studying the liquid-liquid phase transition are briefly described. Some relevant ethical problems are exposed in the bibliography section.
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