S. Bhasin, J. Brito, G. Cunningham et al.
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Menampilkan 20 dari ~2327994 hasil Β· dari CrossRef, DOAJ, arXiv, Semantic Scholar
R. Grant, J. Lama, P. Anderson et al.
W. D. van Marken Lichtenbelt, Joost W. Vanhommerig, N. M. Smulders et al.
P. Ridker, E. Danielson, F. Fonseca et al.
W. Courtenay
I. Meyer
V. Venkatesh, Michael G. Morris
Using the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), this research investigated gender differences in the overlooked context of individual adoption and sustained usage of technology in the workplace. User reactions and technology usage behavior were studied over a five-month period among 342 workers being introduced to a new software system. At all three points of measurement, compared to women, men's technology usage deci
Mary Anne Devanna
E. Tolman
H. Lakka, D. Laaksonen, T. Lakka et al.
J. Myers, M. Prakash, V. Froelicher et al.
Jeffrey S. Berger, M. Roncaglioni, F. Avanzini et al.
Allen C. Bluedorn, R. Kanter
J. Marin, S. Carrizo, Eugenio Vicente et al.
S. Blair, H. Kohl, R. Paffenbarger et al.
J. Stamler, O. Vaccaro, J. Neaton et al.
B. Chiswick
The earnings of foreign-born adult white men, as reported in the 1970 Census of Population, are analyzed through comparisons with the native born and among the foreign born by country of origin, years in the United States, and citizenship. Differences in the effects of schooling and postschool training are explored. Although immigrants initially earn less than the native born, their earnings rise more rapidly with U.S. labor market experience, and after 10 to 15 years their earnings equal, and then exceed, that of the native born. Earnings are unrelated to whether the foreign born are U.S. citizens.
M. Frick, Olli Elo, K. Haapa et al.
J. Shepherd, S. Cobbe, I. Ford et al.
A. Jackson, M. Pollock
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