Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (123) (entfernen)
Sprache
- Englisch (123) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Satellitenfernerkundung (10)
- Modellierung (8)
- Fernerkundung (7)
- Atmosphärische Grenzschicht (5)
- Deutschland (5)
- Meereis (5)
- Arctic (4)
- Arktis (4)
- COVID-19 (4)
- China (4)
- Höhlensalamander (4)
- Klima (4)
- Langzeitgedächtnis (4)
- Lebensmittel (4)
- Lernen (4)
- Rheinland-Pfalz (4)
- Anpassung (3)
- Bodenerosion (3)
- Germany (3)
- Katabatischer Wind (3)
- Luxemburg (3)
- MODIS (3)
- Maschinelles Lernen (3)
- Modell (3)
- Nachhaltigkeit (3)
- Pandemie (3)
- Rutschung (3)
- Stress (3)
- Wald (3)
- Waldinventur (3)
- episodic memory (3)
- long-term memory (3)
- regional climate model (3)
- sea ice (3)
- Alter (2)
- Ambivalenz (2)
- Antarctic (2)
- Antarktis (2)
- Arbeitsgedächtnis (2)
- Argania spinosa (2)
- Augenfolgebewegung (2)
- Biodiversität (2)
- Boden (2)
- Bodenmikrobiologie (2)
- Bodenwasser (2)
- CCLM (2)
- Chemische Analyse (2)
- Degradation (2)
- Episodisches Gedächtnis (2)
- Evaluation (2)
- Greenland (2)
- Herztransplantation (2)
- Information Retrieval (2)
- Infrarotthermographie (2)
- Interaktion (2)
- Jugend (2)
- Larve (2)
- Learning (2)
- Lidar (2)
- Long-term memory (2)
- Luftbild (2)
- MODIS ice surface temperatures (2)
- Mageninhalt (2)
- Marokko (2)
- Memory (2)
- Nahrung (2)
- Nanopartikel (2)
- Polargebiete (2)
- Prognose (2)
- Psychological stress (2)
- Risikomanagement (2)
- SARS-CoV-2 (2)
- Salamander (2)
- Salamanders (2)
- Selbstkontrolle (2)
- Sharing Economy (2)
- Silber (2)
- Stereotyp (2)
- Strahlstrom (2)
- Vergessen (2)
- Wartezeit (2)
- Wasserbilanz (2)
- Weinbau (2)
- Working memory (2)
- ambivalence (2)
- atmospheric boundary layer (2)
- climate change (2)
- depression (2)
- digitalization (2)
- directed forgetting (2)
- drought (2)
- gypsum plaster (2)
- image segmentation (2)
- intervention (2)
- katabatic winds (2)
- leads (2)
- low-level jets (2)
- ozone (2)
- physical activity (2)
- psychology (2)
- stable boundary layer (2)
- verification (2)
- ALS (1)
- Abhängigkeit (1)
- Aborigines (1)
- Abwasser (1)
- Abwasserreinigung (1)
- Acidobacteria (1)
- Actinobacteria (1)
- Adaptation (1)
- Affektstörung (1)
- Agency (1)
- Aktivierung (1)
- Akzent (1)
- Amazonas-Gebiet (1)
- Ambivalence (1)
- Anatolien / Süd (1)
- Andosol (1)
- Anemometrie (1)
- Angola (1)
- Angststörung (1)
- Animal behaviour (1)
- Anorexia nervosa (1)
- Anthropogene Klimaänderung (1)
- Antiparasitäres Mittel (1)
- Anura (1)
- Aquatisches Ökosystem (1)
- Arbeit (1)
- Assisted Suicide (1)
- Asylbewerberunterkunft (1)
- Atmosphärische Turbulenz (1)
- Aufmerksamkeit (1)
- Ausdauer (1)
- Ausgangsgestein (1)
- Ausrottung (1)
- Austalischer Busch (1)
- Australian bush (1)
- Australien (1)
- Australienforschung (1)
- Auswahl (1)
- Auswirkung (1)
- Autokorrelation (1)
- BCI (1)
- BRDF (1)
- Bacteria phyla (1)
- Baum (1)
- Beeinflussung (1)
- Behavioral model (1)
- Behavioural methods (1)
- Belebtschlamm (1)
- Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) (1)
- Beregnung (1)
- Bewaldung (1)
- Bewegungsmessung (1)
- Bildungswesen (1)
- Bildverarbeitung (1)
- Biogasgewinnung (1)
- Biogeochemie (1)
- Biological wastewater treatment (1)
- Bischof (1)
- Bishop (1)
- Blaue Berge <Australien> (1)
- Blutegel (1)
- Bodenbakterien (1)
- Bodenbearbeitung (1)
- Bodenfruchtbarkeit (1)
- Bodennahe Luftschicht (1)
- Bodenschutz (1)
- Brandverhalten (1)
- Bruch (1)
- Burg Turaida (1)
- Buschballade (1)
- CAPE (1)
- COSMO-CLM (1)
- Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Cave (1)
- Change (1)
- Coming-out (1)
- Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) (1)
- Continuity (1)
- Control theory (1)
- Coping strategies (1)
- Cortisol (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Crop classification (1)
- DNA isolation (1)
- DNS-Sequenz (1)
- Dachschiefer (1)
- Datensammlung (1)
- David Malouf (1)
- David Malour (1)
- Deep learning (1)
- Deflation (1)
- Depression (1)
- Diet (1)
- Digitale Revolution (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- Diskriminierung (1)
- Diskursanalyse (1)
- Dissonance (1)
- Disturbance Index (1)
- Drift (1)
- Ecology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Einstrahlung (1)
- Einzugsgebiet (1)
- Eisenhydroxide (1)
- Eisenoxide (1)
- Electricity market equilibrium models (1)
- Emotions (1)
- Emotionsregulation (1)
- Empfindung (1)
- Encodierung (1)
- Energie (1)
- Energiepflanzen (1)
- Englisch (1)
- Entwaldung (1)
- Environment (1)
- Enzym (1)
- Enzymatic reactions (1)
- Enzyme inhibition (1)
- Enzyme kinetics (1)
- Enzymes (1)
- Enzymimmunassay (1)
- Enzymkinetik (1)
- Eradication (1)
- Ergebnis (1)
- Ernährungssicherung (1)
- Erwartung (1)
- Erzählung (1)
- Essgewohnheit (1)
- Europäische Union / Wasserrahmenrichtlinie (1)
- Evapotranspiration (1)
- Evolution (1)
- Experiment (1)
- Exposure time (1)
- Fahrerassistenzsystem (1)
- Fahrzeugverhalten (1)
- Faktorenanalyse (1)
- Faser (1)
- Feedback (1)
- Feldforschung (1)
- Feldfrucht (1)
- Fettsucht (1)
- Feuchtwiese (1)
- Feuersalamander (1)
- Fitness (1)
- Flugkörper (1)
- Forest evapotranspiration (1)
- Forstlicher Standort (1)
- Froschlurche (1)
- Fruchtbildung (1)
- Funktionalität (1)
- GEOBIA (1)
- GPS (1)
- Gamification (1)
- Gauja spillway valley (1)
- Gedächtnis (1)
- Gedächtnistest (1)
- Gefühl (1)
- Gehirn-Computer-Schnittstelle (1)
- Geistiges Eigentum (1)
- Gemeinde (1)
- Genanalyse (1)
- Genauigkeit (1)
- Generationsbeziehung (1)
- Generationsverhältnis (1)
- Genetische Variabilität (1)
- Geneva Emotional Competence Test (1)
- Gesichtsfeld (1)
- Gesundheit (1)
- Gesundheitsverhalten (1)
- Gewitter (1)
- Gips (1)
- Gipsplatte (1)
- Grasslands (1)
- Grenzgebiet (1)
- Griechenland (1)
- Grönland (1)
- Grünland (1)
- HEXAGON (1)
- Haushalt (1)
- Heart rate (1)
- Herpetology (1)
- Human behaviour (1)
- Humangenetik (1)
- Humus (1)
- Hydrology (1)
- Hyperhidrose (1)
- Hyperspektraler Sensor (1)
- Häufigkeit (1)
- Immundefekt (1)
- Immunglobulintherapie (1)
- Individualisierung (1)
- Information (1)
- Intelligence Structure Battery (1)
- Intelligence profiles (1)
- Intelligenz (1)
- Intelligenztest (1)
- Intention (1)
- Interaction (1)
- Interpersonale Kommunikation (1)
- Inversion (1)
- Isolation <Soziologie> (1)
- Italien (1)
- Jews (1)
- Juden (1)
- Judenverfolgung (1)
- Kakuma (1)
- Kalkulationsverfahren (1)
- Kardiovaskuläre Krankheit (1)
- Karst (1)
- Karte (1)
- Kaulquappe (1)
- Kenia (1)
- Kenya (1)
- Kind (1)
- Klassifikation (1)
- Klimaänderung (1)
- Kognitive Psychologie (1)
- Konformitätsprüfung (1)
- Kontamination (1)
- Kriegsfotografie (1)
- Kriging (1)
- Kunststoff (1)
- Körpererfahrung (1)
- Körpertherapie (1)
- Künstliches Fließgewässer (1)
- LAP (1)
- LG children (1)
- Landnutzung (1)
- Landsat (1)
- Laptev Sea (1)
- Laptewsee (1)
- Larva (1)
- Laubwald (1)
- Leben (1)
- Lebensalter (1)
- Leech (1)
- Lerntechnik (1)
- Lesvos (1)
- LiDAR (1)
- Limnology (1)
- Linear complementarity problems (1)
- Literatur (1)
- Lurche (1)
- Längsschnittuntersuchung (1)
- MOSAiC (1)
- Madagascar (1)
- Maisanbau (1)
- Maissilage (1)
- Mann (1)
- Mathematik (1)
- Mathematisches Modell (1)
- Meat Consumption (1)
- Meat Paradox (1)
- Meeresströmung (1)
- Meteorologische Messung (1)
- Middle Ages (1)
- Migration (1)
- Mikrofaser (1)
- MinION (1)
- Mindesthaltbarkeitsdatum (1)
- Mineral (1)
- Mineralogie (1)
- Mitgefühl (1)
- Mitochondria (1)
- Mittelalter (1)
- Mittelgebirge (1)
- Mittelmoseltal (1)
- Moderator (1)
- Moderators and mediators (1)
- Moderner Roman (1)
- Moria (1)
- Morphologie (1)
- Morphologie 〈Linguistik〉 (1)
- Motor mimicry (1)
- MouseTracker (1)
- Multispektralfotografie (1)
- Mund-Nasen-Schutz (1)
- Muster <Struktur> (1)
- Männlichkeit (1)
- Nadelwald (1)
- Nahrungsaufnahme (1)
- Nares-Straße (1)
- Nash–Cournot competition (1)
- Nationalpark Hunsrück-Hochwald (1)
- Naturbilder (1)
- Naturgefahr (1)
- Neptungras (1)
- Netzwerkanalyse (1)
- Niederschlag (1)
- Nordterritorium <Australien> (1)
- North Water Polynya (1)
- Nutzpflanzen (1)
- Oberflächentemperatur (1)
- One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (1)
- OpenStreetMap (1)
- Optimierung (1)
- Organic phosphorus compounds (1)
- Organisationswandel (1)
- Orientierung (1)
- Oxford Nanopore Technologies (1)
- Ozon (1)
- Ozonbelastung (1)
- PTSD (1)
- Paleogenetics (1)
- Parasitism (1)
- Parasitismus (1)
- Patagonien Süd (1)
- Pathogener Mikroorganismus (1)
- Patient (1)
- Patientin (1)
- Patients (1)
- Patrick White (1)
- Patriotismus (1)
- Perfect competition (1)
- Perfektionismus (1)
- Personalisierte Psychotherapie (1)
- Personalisierung (1)
- Personalized mental health (1)
- Pflanzenwachstum (1)
- Phonologie (1)
- Phosphatelimination (1)
- Phosphatgips (1)
- Phosphor elimination (1)
- Phosphororganische Verbindungen (1)
- Phylogenetic analysis (1)
- Phylogenie (1)
- Physical activity (1)
- Physikalisch-chemische Eigenschaft (1)
- Plasmaersatz (1)
- Politisches Handeln (1)
- Politisches System (1)
- Polynja (1)
- Posidonia oceanica fibers (1)
- Posttraumatisches Stresssyndrom (1)
- Precision mental health (1)
- Predation (1)
- Problemlösen (1)
- Process-Oriented Case-Based Reasoning (1)
- Prognosis (1)
- Programm (1)
- Prosa (1)
- Prosocial behavior (1)
- Provinz Copperbelt (1)
- Provinz Golestan (1)
- Prozessanalyse (1)
- Präferenz (1)
- Pseudogley (1)
- Psychische Belastung (1)
- Psychisches Trauma (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Psychometrie (1)
- Psychometrischer Intelligenztest (1)
- Psychosoziale Situation (1)
- Psychotherapie (1)
- Q-sort method (1)
- Qualitätssicherung (1)
- Reaktion (1)
- Rechte Hemisphäre (1)
- Reduktion (1)
- Refugee camps (1)
- Regierung (1)
- Regression Kriging (1)
- Reliabilität (1)
- Ressourcenpolitik (1)
- Robust optimization (1)
- Routine outcome monitoring (1)
- Russisch-Ukrainischer Krieg (1)
- Rückmeldung (1)
- SARS‐CoV‐2 (1)
- SODAR (1)
- Saar-Lor-Lux (1)
- Sambia (1)
- Samenkeimung (1)
- Sardinien (1)
- Schafweide (1)
- Schelfeis (1)
- Schmerz (1)
- Schule (1)
- Schulleistung (1)
- Schulzeugnis (1)
- Schweizer Alpen (1)
- Schweißabsonderung (1)
- Schwitzen (1)
- Science, technology and society (1)
- Seed germination (1)
- Selbstbild (1)
- Selbsteinschätzung (1)
- Selbstwertgefühl (1)
- Selbstwirksamkeit (1)
- Selbstüberwachung (1)
- Selektivität (1)
- Sequenzanalyse / Chemie (1)
- Sewernaja Semlja (1)
- Sheep (1)
- Siamese Graph Neural Networks (1)
- Silver Nanoparticles (1)
- Silver nanoparticles (1)
- Sistānbecken (1)
- Social Media (1)
- Social anxiety disorder (1)
- Sociology (1)
- Sodar (1)
- Soil (1)
- Soil microbial community (1)
- Soil parameterization (1)
- Soil texture (1)
- Somatic experiencing (1)
- Sozialangst (1)
- Sozialer Stress (1)
- Sozialinnovation (1)
- Sozialverhalten (1)
- Sozialwesen (1)
- Spatial autocorrelation (1)
- Speichel (1)
- Spektroradiometrie (1)
- Speleomantes (1)
- Stability (1)
- Stadt (1)
- Stadtplanung (1)
- Stagnosols (1)
- Statistik (1)
- Steilhang (1)
- Sterbehilfe (1)
- Sterbehilfe Italien (1)
- Sterbehilfe italienische Perspektive (1)
- Stickstoffoxide (1)
- Stipendiat (1)
- Stirnhirn (1)
- Stomach (1)
- Stream of (1)
- Student (1)
- Surface Lifted Index (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Temperatur (1)
- Test (1)
- Test-retest (1)
- Testen (1)
- Testergebnis (1)
- Therapieabbruch (1)
- Therapieerfolg (1)
- Thermal stresses (1)
- Thermalluftbild (1)
- Toxicity (1)
- Toxizität (1)
- Trier (1)
- Trockenheit (1)
- Trockenwald (1)
- Trophic interactions (1)
- UAV (1)
- Umfrage (1)
- Umweltbewusstsein (1)
- Umweltfaktor (1)
- Umweltprobe (1)
- Unterrichtsfach (1)
- Validierung (1)
- Vater (1)
- Vegetarianism (1)
- Verbesserung (1)
- Verbreitung (1)
- Verbreitungsökologie (1)
- Verbundwerkstoff (1)
- Verhaltensmuster (1)
- Verlangen (1)
- Vermeidung (1)
- Verpackung (1)
- Verschwendung (1)
- Verschwörungstheorie (1)
- Verstärkung (1)
- Verteilungsgerechtigkeit (1)
- Vertrauen (1)
- Verzerrung (1)
- Videospiel (1)
- Virtuelle Umgebung (1)
- Visuelle Aufmerksamkeit (1)
- Visuelle Kommunikation (1)
- Waldtyp (1)
- Wandel (1)
- War in Ukraine (1)
- Wasser (1)
- Wasserstress (1)
- Water Framework Directive (1)
- Water balance simulation (1)
- Wechselwarme (1)
- Weddellmeer (1)
- Willenskraft (1)
- Wind (1)
- Windfeld (1)
- Wärmeanomalie (1)
- Zeit (1)
- Zeitreihenanalyse (1)
- Zentralaustralien (1)
- Zuckergehalt (1)
- adolescents (1)
- advanced heart failure (1)
- aerial imagery (1)
- age stereotypes (1)
- agricultural dust (1)
- analysistransplantation (1)
- argan tree (1)
- atmospheric modeling (1)
- atmospheric modelling (1)
- atmospheric water balance (1)
- basal area increment (1)
- behavioural ecology (1)
- best before (1)
- biodiversity (1)
- biodiversity hotspots (1)
- biogas (1)
- biomethantion (1)
- body composition (1)
- bottom-up-therapy (1)
- change mapping (1)
- co-registration (1)
- cognition (1)
- coming out (or disclosure) (1)
- common variable immunodeficiency (1)
- community-based production (1)
- composite materials (1)
- conformance checking (1)
- conservation value (1)
- conspiracy myths (1)
- conspiracy theories (1)
- convalescent plasma (1)
- correction factor (1)
- crop stress (1)
- cross-country (1)
- crystallized abilities (1)
- date labeling (1)
- deep learning (1)
- degradation (1)
- difference-in-differences (1)
- differentiated instruction (1)
- discourse analysis (1)
- distress (1)
- domestic food waste (1)
- dry tropical forest (1)
- early response (1)
- eating behavior (1)
- eating behaviour (1)
- ecological modelling (1)
- ectotherms (1)
- education aid (1)
- emergency remote teaching (1)
- emissivity (1)
- emotional intelligence (1)
- encoding (1)
- environmental impact (1)
- erosion measurement (1)
- eukaryotes (1)
- evaluation (1)
- evapotranspiration (ET) modeling (1)
- event log preprocessing (1)
- event reconstruction (1)
- experimental design (1)
- factor analysis (1)
- fathers (1)
- fillers (1)
- fire performance (1)
- fitness tracker (1)
- fluid abilities (1)
- food preference (1)
- food security (1)
- forensic voice comparison (1)
- forest (1)
- forest degradation (1)
- forest inventory (1)
- forests (1)
- foss (1)
- fructification (1)
- games, experimental (1)
- gap flow (1)
- geobia (1)
- geography of knowledge (1)
- geometric (1)
- glycaemic index (1)
- graph embedding (1)
- growth mixture modeling (1)
- heart failure (1)
- heart transplant (1)
- herpetology (1)
- hesitations (1)
- homosexuality (1)
- hybrid organizations (1)
- hyperspectral (1)
- ice shelves (1)
- ice thickness (1)
- immunoglobulin replacement (1)
- inclusion (1)
- inclusive education (1)
- individual tree detection (1)
- innovation (1)
- insect conservation (1)
- intellectual property rights (1)
- interference (1)
- intergenerational programs (1)
- intergenerational programs, evaluation, adolescents, older adults, age stereotypes, ageism, youthism (1)
- inversion (1)
- invisible deviating events (1)
- just transition (1)
- katabatic wind (1)
- land use (1)
- landslides (1)
- learning (1)
- lengthening (1)
- local wastewater planning (1)
- long DNA barcodes (1)
- machine-learning (1)
- management (1)
- media effects (1)
- mediated traumatization (1)
- metabarcoding (1)
- meteorology (1)
- microrefugia (1)
- mineralogy (1)
- miombo woodland (1)
- motion energy analysis (1)
- mountain topography (1)
- multispectral (1)
- nature imagery (1)
- nitrogen oxides (1)
- nonverbal synchrony (1)
- norm mineral calculation (1)
- novel of the 20th century (1)
- numerical models (1)
- obesity (1)
- older adults (1)
- open data (1)
- open-canopy woodland (1)
- organization theory (1)
- paraverbal behavior (1)
- particulate matter (1)
- patents (1)
- personal trust (1)
- personalized psychotherapy (1)
- phosphogypsum (1)
- phototropism (1)
- phyllites (1)
- physico-mechanical properties (1)
- physiological parameters (1)
- plant adaptation mechanisms (1)
- plant architecture (1)
- plastic (1)
- platform economy (1)
- point set registration (1)
- polynyas (1)
- post-traumatic stress disorder (1)
- posttraumatic stress disorder (1)
- press photography (1)
- process mining (1)
- proof of concept study (1)
- psychology and behaviorsocial isolation (1)
- psychometric validation (1)
- public perception (1)
- questionnaires (1)
- reception patterns (1)
- recurring events (1)
- regeneration (1)
- region growing (1)
- remote sensing (1)
- resource governance (1)
- retrieval practice (1)
- ribosomal (1)
- risk assessment (1)
- risk factors (1)
- roof slates (1)
- salivary alpha-amylase (1)
- satellite TIR mission (1)
- scholarship students (1)
- school (1)
- school performance (1)
- school subject (1)
- sea-ice (1)
- segmentation (1)
- selective forgetting (1)
- self-perception (1)
- sentinel 1 (1)
- sentinel-2 (1)
- shales (1)
- sharing economies (1)
- similarity-based retrieval (1)
- slope stability modelling (1)
- smoking (1)
- social contactssurvival (1)
- social entrepreneurs (1)
- social innovation (SI) (1)
- social innovation networks (1)
- social service organizations (1)
- social sustainability (1)
- socio-nature relations (1)
- soil microbial activity (1)
- soil microbial biomass (1)
- soil water content (1)
- spaces of opportunity (1)
- stem detection (1)
- stream of consciousness (1)
- sub-Saharan Africa (1)
- sustainability (1)
- system trust (1)
- teachers (1)
- temperature (1)
- testing (1)
- text memory (1)
- thermal infrared (TIR) (1)
- thermal infrared remote sensing (1)
- thermal remote sensing (1)
- thunderstorm (1)
- time series analysis (1)
- topographic flow (1)
- trademarks (1)
- trauma therapy (1)
- tree density (1)
- tree inclination (1)
- tree matching (1)
- turbulence parameterization (1)
- uncritical patriotism (1)
- urban and rural boundaries (1)
- video games (1)
- visual communication (1)
- visual empathy (1)
- viticulture (1)
- water stress (1)
- water use (1)
- waterlogging (1)
- wetland conservation (1)
- wind erosion (1)
- woody cover (1)
- Überflutung (1)
- Überleben (1)
- Übung (1)
Institut
- Raum- und Umweltwissenschaften (50)
- Psychologie (30)
- Fachbereich 6 (13)
- Fachbereich 1 (5)
- Fachbereich 2 (5)
- Informatik (3)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (3)
- Fachbereich 4 (2)
- Pädagogik (2)
- Soziologie (2)
- Anglistik (1)
- Fachbereich 5 (1)
- Geschichte, mittlere und neuere (1)
- Mathematik (1)
- Medienwissenschaft (1)
- Pflegewissenschaft (1)
- Phonetik (1)
The state-of-the-art finite element software Plaxis 3D was applied in a real-world study site of the Turaida castle mound to investigate the slope stability of the mound and understand the mechanisms triggering landslides there. During the simulation, the stability of the castle mound was analysed and the most landslide-susceptible zones of hillslopes were determined. The 3D finite-element stability analysis has significant advantages over conventional 2D limit-equilibrium methods where locations of 2D stability sections are arbitrarily selected. Two modelling scenarios of the slope stability were elaborated considering deep-seated slides in bedrock and shallow landslides in the colluvial material of slopes. The model shows that shallow slides in colluvium are more probable. In the finite-element model, slope failure occurs along the weakest zone in colluvium, similarly to the situation observed in previous landslides in the study site. The physical basis of the model allows results to be obtained very close to natural conditions and delivers valuable insight in triggering mechanisms of landslides.
Three Kinds of Rising-Falling Contours in German wh-Questions: Evidence From Form and Function
(2022)
The intonational realization of utterances is generally characterized by regional as well as inter- and intra-speaker variability in f0. Category boundaries thus remain “fuzzy” and it is non-trivial how the (continuous) acoustic space maps onto (discrete) pitch accent categories. We focus on three types of rising-falling contours, which differ in the alignment of L(ow) and H(igh) tones with respect to the stressed syllable. Most of the intonational systems on German have described two rising accent categories, e.g., L+H* and L*+H in the German ToBI system. L+H* has a high-pitched stressed syllable and a low leading tone aligned in the pre-tonic syllable; L*+H a low-pitched stressed syllable and a high trailing tone in the post-tonic syllable. There are indications for the existence of a third category which lies between these two categories, with both L and H aligned within the stressed syllable, henceforth termed (LH)*. In the present paper, we empirically investigate the distinctiveness of three rising-falling contours [L+H*, (LH)*, and L*+H, all with a subsequent low boundary tone] in German wh-questions. We employ an approach that addresses both the form and the function of the contours, also taking regional variation into account. In Experiment 1 (form), we used a delayed imitation paradigm to test whether Northern and Southern German speakers can imitate the three rising-falling contours in wh-questions as distinct contours. In Experiment 2 (function), we used a free association task to investigate whether listeners interpret the pragmatic meaning of the three contours differently. Imitation results showed that German speakers—both from the North and the South—reproduced the three contours. There was a small but significant effect of regional variety such that contours produced by speakers from the North were slightly more distinct than those by speakers from the South. In the association task, listeners from both varieties attributed distinct meanings to the (LH)* accent as opposed to the two ToBI accents L+H* and L*+H. Combined evidence from form and function suggests that three distinct contours can be found in the acoustic and perceptual space of German rising-falling contours.
Laboratory landslide experiments enable the observation of specific properties of these natural hazards. However, these observations are limited by traditional techniques: frequently used high-speed video analysis and wired sensors (e.g. displacement). These techniques lead to the drawback that either only the surface and 2D profiles can be observed or wires confine the motion behaviour. In contrast, an unconfined observation of the total spatiotemporal dynamics of landslides is needed for an adequate understanding of these natural hazards.
The present study introduces an autonomous and wireless probe to characterize motion features of single clasts within laboratory-scale landslides. The Smartstone probe is based on an inertial measurement unit (IMU) and records acceleration and rotation at a sampling rate of 100 Hz. The recording ranges are ±16 g (accelerometer) and ±2000∘ s−1 (gyroscope). The plastic tube housing is 55 mm long with a diameter of 10 mm. The probe is controlled, and data are read out via active radio frequency identification (active RFID) technology. Due to this technique, the probe works under low-power conditions, enabling the use of small button cell batteries and minimizing its size.
Using the Smartstone probe, the motion of single clasts (gravel size, median particle diameter d50 of 42 mm) within approx. 520 kg of a uniformly graded pebble material was observed in a laboratory experiment. Single pebbles were equipped with probes and placed embedded and superficially in or on the material. In a first analysis step, the data of one pebble are interpreted qualitatively, allowing for the determination of different transport modes, such as translation, rotation and saltation. In a second step, the motion is quantified by means of derived movement characteristics: the analysed pebble moves mainly in the vertical direction during the first motion phase with a maximal vertical velocity of approx. 1.7 m s−1. A strong acceleration peak of approx. 36 m s−2 is interpreted as a pronounced hit and leads to a complex rotational-motion pattern. In a third step, displacement is derived and amounts to approx. 1.0 m in the vertical direction. The deviation compared to laser distance measurements was approx. −10 %. Furthermore, a full 3D spatiotemporal trajectory of the pebble is reconstructed and visualized supporting the interpretations. Finally, it is demonstrated that multiple pebbles can be analysed simultaneously within one experiment. Compared to other observation methods Smartstone probes allow for the quantification of internal movement characteristics and, consequently, a motion sampling in landslide experiments.
People are increasingly concerned about how meat affects the environment, human health, and animal welfare, yet eating and enjoying meat remains a norm. Unsurprisingly, many people are ambivalent about meat—evaluating it as both positive and negative. Here, we propose that meat-related conflict is multidimensional and depends on people’s dietary group: Omnivores’ felt ambivalence relates to multiple negative associations that oppose a predominantly positive attitude towards meat, and veg*ans’ ambivalence relates to various positive associations that oppose a predominantly negative attitude. A qualitative study (N = 235; German) revealed that omnivores and veg*ans experience meat-related ambivalence due to associations with animals, sociability, sustainability, health, and sensory experiences. To quantify felt ambivalence in these domains, we developed the Meat Ambivalence Questionnaire (MAQ). We validated the MAQ in four pre-registered studies using self-report and behavioral data (N = 3,485; German, UK, representative US). Both omnivores and veg*ans reported meat-related ambivalence, but with differences across domains and their consequences for meat consumption. Specifically, ambivalence was associated with less meat consumption in omnivores (especially sensory-/animal-based ambivalence) and more meat consumption in veg*ans (especially sensory-/socially-based ambivalence). Network analyses shed further light on the nomological net of the MAQ while controlling for a comprehensive set of determinants of meat consumption. By introducing the MAQ, we hope to provide researchers with a tool to better understand how ambivalence accompanies behavior change and maintenance.
The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has had a significant impact on China in political, economic, and cultural terms. This study focuses on the cultural domain, especially on scholarship students from the countries that signed bilateral cooperation agreements with China under the BRI. Using an integrated approach combining the difference-in-differences method and the gravity model, we explore the correlation between the BRI and the increasing number of international scholarship students funded by the Chinese government, as well as the determinants of students' decision to study in China. The panel data from 2010 to 2018 show that the launch of BRI has had a positive impact on the number of scholarship students from BRI countries. The number of scholarship recipients from non-BRI countries also increased, but at a much slower rate than those from BRI countries. The sole exception is the United States, which has trended downward for both state-funded and self-funded students.
The forward testing effect refers to the finding that retrieval practice of previously studied information enhances learning and retention of subsequently studied other information. While most of the previous research on the forward testing effect examined group differences, the present study took an individual differences approach to investigate this effect. Experiment 1 examined whether the forward effect has test-retest reliability between two experimental sessions. Experiment 2 investigated whether the effect is related to participants’ working memory capacity. In both experiments (and each session of Experiment 1), participants studied three lists of items in anticipation of a final cumulative recall test. In the testing condition, participants were tested immediately on lists 1 and 2, whereas in the restudy condition, they restudied lists 1 and 2. In both conditions, participants were tested immediately on list 3. On the group level, the results of both experiments demonstrated a forward testing effect, with interim testing of lists 1 and 2 enhancing immediate recall of list 3. On the individual level, the results of Experiment 1 showed that the forward effect on list 3 recall has moderate test-retest reliability between two experimental sessions. In addition, the results of Experiment 2 showed that the forward effect on list 3 recall does not depend on participants’ working memory capacity. These findings suggest that the forward testing effect is reliable at the individual level and affects learners at a wide range of working memory capacities alike. The theoretical and practical implications of the findings are discussed.
The forward effect of testing refers to the finding that retrieval practice of previously studied information increases retention of subsequently studied other information. It has recently been hypothesized that the forward effect (partly) reflects the result of a reset-of-encoding (ROE) process. The proposal is that encoding efficacy decreases with an increase in study material, but testing of previously studied information resets the encoding process and makes the encoding of the subsequently studied information as effective as the encoding of the previously studied information. The goal of the present study was to verify the ROE hypothesis on an item level basis. An experiment is reported that examined the effects of testing in comparison to restudy on items’ serial position curves. Participants studied three lists of items in each condition. In the testing condition, participants were tested immediately on non-target lists 1 and 2, whereas in the restudy condition, they restudied lists 1 and 2. In both conditions, participants were tested immediately on target list 3. Influences of condition and items’ serial learning position on list 3 recall were analyzed. The results showed the forward effect of testing and furthermore that this effect varies with items’ serial list position. Early target list items at list primacy positions showed a larger enhancement effect than middle and late target list items at non-primacy positions. The results are consistent with the ROE hypothesis on an item level basis. The generalizability of the ROE hypothesis across different experimental tasks, like the list-method directed-forgetting task, is discussed.
The Firepower of Work Craving: When Self-Control Is Burning under the Rubble of Self-Regulation
(2017)
Work craving theory addresses how work-addicted individuals direct great emotion-regulatory efforts to weave their addictive web of working. They crave work for two main emotional incentives: to overcompensate low self-worth and to escape (i.e., reduce) negative affect, which is strategically achieved through neurotic perfectionism and compulsive working. Work-addicted individuals" strong persistence and self-discipline with respect to work-related activities suggest strong skills in volitional action control. However, their inability to disconnect from work implies low volitional skills. How can work-addicted individuals have poor and strong volitional skills at the same time? To answer this paradox, we elaborated on the relevance of two different volitional modes in work craving: self-regulation (self-maintenance) and self-control (goal maintenance). Four hypotheses were derived from Wojdylo- work craving theory and Kuhl- self-regulation theory: (H1) Work craving is associated with a combination of low self-regulation and high self-control. (H2) Work craving is associated with symptoms of psychological distress. (H3) Low self-regulation is associated with psychological distress symptoms. (H4) Work craving mediates the relationships between self-regulation deficits and psychological distress symptoms at high levels of self-control. Additionally, we aimed at supporting the discriminant validity of work craving with respect to work engagement by showing their different volitional underpinnings. Results of the two studies confirmed our hypotheses: whereas work craving was predicted by high self-control and low self-regulation and associated with higher psychological distress, work engagement was predicted by high self-regulation and high self-control and associated with lower symptoms of psychological distress. Furthermore, work styles mediated the relationship between volitional skills and symptoms of psychological distress. Based on these new insights, several suggestions for prevention and therapeutic interventions for work-addicted individuals are proposed.
The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
(2018)
The phylogenetic relationships among members of the family Salamandridae have been repeatedly investigated over the last 90 years, with changing character and taxon sampling. We review the changing composition and the phylogenetic position of salamandrid genera and species groups and add a new phylogeny based exclusively on sequences of nuclear genes. Salamandrina often changed its position depending on the characters used. It was included several times in a clade together with the primitive newts (Echinotriton, Pleurodeles, Tylototriton) due to their seemingly ancestral morphology. The latter were often inferred as a monophyletic clade. Respective monophyly was almost consistently established in all molecular studies for true salamanders (Chioglossa, Lyciasalamandra, Mertensiella, Salamandra), modern Asian newts (Cynops, Laotriton, Pachytriton, Paramesotriton) and modern New World newts (Notophthalmus, Taricha). Reciprocal non-monophyly has been established through molecular studies for the European mountain newts (Calotriton, Euproctus) and the modern European newts (Ichthyosaura, Lissotriton, Neurergus, Ommatotriton, Triturus) since Calotriton was identified as the sister lineage of Triturus. In pre-molecular studies, their respective monophyly had almost always been assumed, mainly because a complex courtship behaviour shared by their respective members. Our nuclear tree is nearly identical to a mito-genomic tree, with all but one node being highly supported. The major difference concerns the position of Calotriton, which is no longer nested within the modern European newts. This has implications for the evolution of courtship behaviour of European newts. Within modern European newts, Ichthyosaura and Lissotriton changed their position compared to the mito-genomic tree. Previous molecular trees based on seemingly large nuclear data sets, but analysed together with mitochondrial data, did not reveal monophyly of modern European newts since taxon sampling and nuclear gene coverage was too poor to obtain conclusive results. We therefore conclude that mitochondrial and nuclear data should be analysed on their own.
The benefits of prosocial power motivation in leadership: Action orientation fosters a win-win
(2023)
Power motivation is considered a key component of successful leadership. Based on its dualistic nature, the need for power (nPower) can be expressed in a dominant or a prosocial manner. Whereas dominant motivation is associated with antisocial behaviors, prosocial motivation is characterized by more benevolent actions (e.g., helping, guiding). Prosocial enactment of the power motive has been linked to a wide range of beneficial outcomes, yet less has been investigated what determines a prosocial enactment of the power motive. According to Personality Systems Interactions (PSI) theory, action orientation (i.e., the ability to self-regulate affect) promotes prosocial enactment of the implicit power motive and initial findings within student samples verify this assumption. In the present study, we verified the role of action orientation as an antecedent for prosocial power enactment in a leadership sample (N = 383). Additionally, we found that leaders personally benefited from a prosocial enactment strategy. Results show that action orientation through prosocial power motivation leads to reduced power-related anxiety and, in turn, to greater leader well-being. The integration of motivation and self-regulation research reveals why leaders enact their power motive in a certain way and helps to understand how to establish a win-win situation for both followers and leaders.