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Different Attitudes (different + attitude)
Selected AbstractsCompositionality issues in discrete, continuous, and hybrid systemsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ROBUST AND NONLINEAR CONTROL, Issue 5 2001A. J. van der Schaft Abstract Models of complex dynamical systems are often built by connecting submodels of smaller parts. The key to this method is the operation of ,interconnection' or ,composition' which serves to define the whole in terms of its parts. In the setting of smooth differential equations the composition operation has often been regarded as trivial, but a quite different attitude is found in the discrete domain where several definitions of composition have been proposed and different semantics have been developed. The non-triviality of composition carries over from discrete systems to hybrid systems. The paper discusses the compositionality issue in the context of discrete, continuous, and hybrid systems, mainly on the basis of a number of examples. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Extremely interesting, very interesting, or only quite interesting?JOURNAL OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS, Issue 3 2002Adverbs, social class An earlier study, based on interviews with a socially stratified sample showed a difference in the use of adverbs, with the middle,class speakers using derived adverbs in ,ly more than twice as frequently as the working,class speakers. An examination of interactions in peer,group same,sex dyads shows a similar socially stratified pattern in both adults and adolescents. There are similar differences in the use of some other adverbs and certain adjectives. The consistency of the results suggests that there is a stable difference in speech styles between the two social classes and that this difference reflects a different attitude on the part of the speakers to their audience. [source] Masturbation and Discourse on Female Sexual Practices in Early Modern JapanGENDER & HISTORY, Issue 1 2009Anne Walthall Much of the discourse on female sexual practices in early modern Japan centred on masturbation, usually with a dildo, deemed necessary for a woman's mental and physical health when the male member was unavailable. References to female same-sex relations suggest that they too made sense in situations where men were absent. Some sex manuals treated female sexual arousal within the context of conjugal relations, while a text written for wives in polygamous marriages places female sexual practice at the service of male interests. The texts analysed here show not only that early modern Japanese held different attitudes toward sex than their western counterparts, but also that they could hold multiple attitudes at the same time. [source] Unravelling the complexities of high commitment: an employee-level analysisHUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, Issue 2 2009Edel Conway Research within HRM has faced criticism for failing to focus adequately on employee experiences of HR practice. In particular, the ,high-commitment' models fail to recognise employee perspectives on HRM, the complexities of the commitment construct and the possibility that organisations configure HR systems in various ways. This paper explores the impact of employee attitudes towards HR practices on affective, continuance and normative commitment, and intention to leave in three organisational contexts. The findings suggest that different HR systems can yield different attitudes towards HR practices, which in turn can impact on different forms of commitment and levels of intention to leave. The findings provide insights into the ways in which organisations manage the commitment process through HR practices and the response by employees to these interventions. [source] Understanding public attitudes towards Social SecurityINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WELFARE, Issue 2 2006Philip Yang There has been very little research on why individuals hold different attitudes toward Social Security. In this article we integrate social location theory and political predisposition theory to provide a framework of explanation and test these theories using a unique sample from the 1998 General Social Survey. Our multivariate results reveal that social structural positions along the lines of race, gender, class and age play a more important role than political predispositions in explain-ing individual differences in support for the current Social Security system against privatisation. Political party affiliation also partly contributes to variation in support for Social Security, but political ideology does not have a significant effect. Our results suggest that with regard to support for Social Security, primary consideration must rest on social structural positions. Racial minorities, women, the poor and the elderly tend to dislike a drastic change in the current Social Security system, and Social Security reform ought to pay attention to their concerns. Our robust finding of a positive relationship between age and support for Social Security also challenges much of the established knowledge, pointing to an intergenerational discord over Social Security. It is also important to differentiate among social welfare programmes in order to uncover the real determinants of public attitudes towards them. [source] Feeding Practices of Dog and Cat Owners Reflect Attitudes Toward Pet FoodsJOURNAL OF ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY AND NUTRITION, Issue 11-12 2005K. N. Willoughby The PET DINER study was a telephone survey conducted to better understand why pet owners make certain nutritional decisions for their pets. Both dog and cat owners were included, which allowed us to differentiate the way people feed pet cats vs. pet dogs and how that might reflect owners' attitudes about pet foods. Prospective survey respondents were selected from local telephone books using a randomized process. A total of 18,194 calls were made from the five study sites between May and August, 2004. 1074 people (6%) representing 619 dogs and 455 cats completed the survey. Detailed information about feeding practices was collected. Pet owners' perceptions were assessed based on agreement/disagreement with statements regarding pet foods and the pet food industry. The Mann,Whitney Rank Sum test was used to detect differences between dog and cat owners and the Kruskal,Wallis one-way analysis of variance on ranks was used to evaluate differences among pet owners based on both type of pet and feeding practices (,75% commercial vs. ,50% home-prepared diets). More cats than dogs ate commercial pet food as ,75% of their main diet (96% vs. 87%, respectively; p < 0.001), and more dogs than cats ate a home-prepared food as ,50% of their main diet (6% vs. 3%, respectively; p < 0.009). For five of the statements, a difference in the attitudes of cat vs. dog owners was detected (p < 0.05). In general, this reflected more positive attitudes regarding commercial foods and less positive attitudes regarding home-prepared foods on the part of cat vs. dog owners. Analysis based on both type of pet and feeding practices identified significant differences among groups for 18/26 statements. However, when the Dunn's Method for pairwise multiple comparisons was applied, significant differences were due to feeding practices rather than type of pet for 17/18 statements. Only differences in attitudes about the statement ,raw bones can be safely fed to pets' remained significant for cat vs. dog owners feeding commercial foods. In conclusion, more cat owners than dog owners feed ,75% commercial foods to their pets and this is reflected in different attitudes about the nutritional soundness of commercial pet foods. [source] Managing risk through a flexible recipe frameworkAICHE JOURNAL, Issue 3 2008Sergio Ferrer-Nadal Abstract A novel approach is proposed that exploits the use of a flexible recipe framework as a better way to handle the risk associated with the scheduling under uncertainty of batch chemical plants. The proposed solution strategy relies on a novel two-stage stochastic formulation that explicitly includes the trade-off between risk and profit at the decision-making level. The model uses a continuous-time domain representation and the generalized notion of precedence. Management of risk is explicitly addressed by including a control measure (i.e., the profit in the worst scenario), as an additional objective to be considered, thus, leading to a multiobjective optimization problem. To overcome the numerical difficulties associated with such mathematical formulation, a decomposition strategy based on the sample average approximation (SAA) is introduced. The main advantages of this approach are illustrated through a case study, in which a set of solutions appealing to decision makers with different attitudes toward risk are obtained. The potential benefits of the proposed flexible recipe framework as a way of managing the risk associated with the plant operation under demand uncertainty are highlighted through comparison with the conventional approach that considers nominal operating conditions. Numerical results corroborate the advantages of exploiting the capabilities of the proposed flexible recipe framework for risk management purposes. © 2008 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2008 [source] Divided justice, different voices: inheritance and family provisionLEGAL STUDIES, Issue 4 2003Fiona Cownie Both the Family Division of the High Court and the Chancery Division of the High Court exercise jurisdiction over the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependents) Act 1975, with the applicant being able to elect the Division that they wish to proceed in. Many practitioners believe that the two Divisions have different attitudes towards the Act. This paper argues the structure of the 1975 Act makes it highly likely that the two Divisions will approach in different ways and that a close analysis of judgments shows that there is a discernible difference in the rhetoric that is used in judgments in the two Divisions, that this difference in rhetoric affects the way in which applicants are viewed and that thus sometimes it affects the outcome of cases. Since there is no advantage in practice to having the two jurisdictions and since the difference between the jurisprudences in the two Divisions can result in like cases not being treated alike, an elementary form of injustice. The paper concludes that it would be better if one Division exercised sole jurisdiction over the Act. [source] The Rule of Law, Democracy, and International Law.RATIO JURIS, Issue 4 2007Learning from the US Experience Different institutional conceptions of this relationship give rise to different attitudes towards international law. Nonetheless, questions arise that cast doubt on age-old tenets of certain Western countries concerning the radical separability between the rule of law within the domestic system and in the international realm. The article will start considering some recent developments in the United States' treatment of alien detainees. Then it shall address the relation between domestic constitutions and international legal systems, pointing out the challenge coming from the development of "super partes" international law and jus cogens. The question concerning the appeal to the rule of law will be made: Can our attitude to the rule of international law be exempted from consistency with the rule of law that we claim for our domestic system? In order to answer this question (in the negative), an appropriate theoretical perspective is eventually proposed and displayed. [source] Do maternity care provider groups have different attitudes towards birth?BJOG : AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNAECOLOGY, Issue 12 2004Birgit Reime Objective To compare family physicians', obstetricians' and midwives' self-reported practices, attitudes and beliefs about central issues in childbirth. Design Mail-out questionnaire. Setting/Population All registered midwives in the province, and a sample of family physicians and obstetricians in a maternity care teaching hospital. Response rates: 91% (n= 50), 69% (n= 97) and 89% (n= 34), respectively. Methods A postal survey. Main outcome measures Twenty-three five-point Likert scale items (strongly agree to strongly disagree) addressing attitudes toward routine electronic fetal monitoring, induction of labour, epidural analgesia, episiotomy, doulas, vaginal birth after caesarean section (VBACs), birth centres, provision educational material, birth plans and caesarean section. Results Cluster analysis identified three distinct clusters based on similar response to the questions. The ,MW' cluster consisted of 100% of midwives and 26% of the family physicians. The ,OB' cluster was composed of 79% of the obstetricians and 16% of the family physicians. The ,FP' cluster was composed of 58% the family physicians and 21% the obstetricians. Members of the ,OB' cluster more strongly believed that women had the right to request a caesarean section without maternal/fetal indications (P < 0.001), that epidurals early in labour were not associated with development of fetal malpositions (P < 0.001) and that increasing caesarean rates were a sign of improvement in obstetrics (P < 0.001). The ,OB' cluster members were more likely to say they would induce women as soon as possible after 41 3/7 weeks of gestation (P < 0.001) and were least likely to encourage the use of birth plans (P < 0.001). The ,MW' cluster's views were the opposite of the ,OBs' while the ,FP' cluster's views fell between the ,MW' and ,OB' clusters. Conclusions In our environment, obstetricians were the most attached to technology and interventions including caesarean section and inductions, midwives the least, while family physicians fell in the middle. While generalisations can be problematic, obstetricians and midwives generally follow a defined and different approach to maternity care. Family physicians are heterogeneous, sometimes practising more like midwives and sometimes more like obstetricians. [source] |