Individual-level Analyses (individual-level + analysis)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Economic Voting and Multilevel Governance: A Comparative Individual-Level Analysis

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, Issue 2 2006
Cameron D. Anderson
An important component of incumbent support is the reward/punishment calculus of economic voting. Previous work has shown that "clarity of responsibility" within the central state government conditions national economic effects on incumbent vote choice: where clarity is high (low), economic effects are greater (less). This article advances the "clarity of responsibility" argument by considering the effect of multilevel governance on economic voting. In institutional contexts of multilevel governance, the process of correctly assigning responsibility for economic outcomes can be difficult. This article tests the proposition that multilevel governance mutes effects of national economic conditions by undermining responsibility linkages to the national government. Individual-level data from the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems Module 1 are used to test this proposition. Results demonstrate that economic voting is weakest in countries where multilevel governance is most prominent. Findings are discussed in light of the contribution to the economic voting literature and the potential implications of multilevel governance. [source]


The Influence of Cultural Values on Antecedents of Organisational Commitment: An Individual-Level Analysis

APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 4 2003
S. Arzu Wasti
On s'est demandé dans cette recherche si les valeurs culturelles que sont l'individualisme et le collectivisme évaluées au niveau individuel avaient un impact sur le poids des différents facteurs de l'implication organisationnelle. Il est apparu que la satisfaction due au travail et à l'avancement était le déterminant primaire de l'implication affective et normative des salariés qui adhèrent à l'individualisme. Pour ceux qui s'orientent ver des valeurs collectivistes, être satisfait du supérieur était le facteur essentiel de l'implication, devant la satisfaction relative au travail et à la promotion. Des résultats analogues ont été obtenus pour l'implication à long terme. Bien que certains des antécédents de l'implication organisationnelle soient commun aux deux groupes, l'orientation vers la tâche ou vers les relations varie avec les individus relevant d'orientations culturelles différentes. This study investigated whether cultural values of individualism and collectivism measured at the individual level influence the salience of different antecedents of organisational commitment. The findings indicated that satisfaction with work and promotion are the primary determinants of affective and normative commitment for employees who endorse individualist values. For employees with collectivist values, satisfaction with supervisor was found to be an important commitment antecedent over and above satisfaction with work and promotion. Similar results were obtained for continuance commitment. The results indicate that although some antecedents of organisational commitment are common across the two groups, the emphasis placed on task versus relationships differs across individuals with varying cultural orientations. [source]


Requiem for a Lightweight: Vice Presidential Candidate Evaluations and the Presidential Vote

PRESIDENTIAL STUDIES QUARTERLY, Issue 3 2001
DAVID W. ROMERO
Presidential election scholars have recently begun to explore whether vice presidential nominees have a meaningful influence on the presidential vote. Their findings are in conflict. Aggregate-level analyses find little support for the hypothesis that vice presidential candidates bring their ticket any regional or home state advantage. Individual-level analyses, on the other hand, find that vice presidential nominees have a surprisingly powerful influence on the typical voter's vote for president. These conflicting findings suggest that either aggregate-level results underestimate vice presidential nominees' influence on the vote or that individual-level results overestimate vice presidential nominees' influence on the vote. The author assumes it is the latter. Based on this assumption, the author reexamines whether vice presidential candidates influence the individual vote for president. Once rationalization affects are controlled, it is found that vice presidential candidates have no influence on the voters' choice for president. [source]


Alcohol outlet density and university student drinking: a national study

ADDICTION, Issue 7 2008
Kypros Kypri
ABSTRACT Aims To examine the geographic density of alcohol outlets and associations with drinking levels and related problems among university students. Design Cross-sectional survey study using geospatial data, with campus-level and individual-level analyses. Participants A total of 2550 students (mean age 20.2, 60% women) at six university campuses in New Zealand (63% response). Measurements Counts of alcohol outlets within 3 km of each campus were tested for their non-parametric correlation with aggregated campus drinking levels and related problems. Generalized estimating equations were used to model the relation between outlet counts within 1 km and 3 km of student residences and individual drinking levels/problems, with control for gender, age, ethnicity and high school binge drinking frequency, and adjustment for campus-level clustering. Findings Correlations for campus-level data were 0.77 (P = 0.07) for drinking and personal problems, and 0.31 (P = 0.54) for second-hand effects. There were consistent significant associations of both on- and off-licence outlet densities with all outcomes in student-level adjusted models. Effects were largest for 1 km densities and off-licence outlets. Conclusions There are positive associations between alcohol outlet density and individual drinking and related problems. Associations remain after controlling for demographic variables and pre-university drinking, i.e. the associations are unlikely to be due to self-selection effects. Increasing alcohol outlet density, and particularly off-licences, may increase alcohol-related harm among university students. [source]


Variations in Immigrant Incorporation in the Neighborhoods of Amsterdam

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2006
JOHN R. LOGAN
Amsterdam's immigrants of Caribbean and southern Mediterranean origin have been characterized as modestly segregated from Dutch residents, and their residential assimilation has been expected to proceed rapidly. This article tests the hypothesis of spatial assimilation using both aggregate data on levels of segregation and individual-level analyses of the people who live in ethnic minority neighborhoods. Evidence is presented of assimilation for immigrants from the former colonies of Surinam and the Antilles, but Turks and Moroccans are shown to face stronger barriers. The former groups' higher standing favors their mobility from ethnically distinct neighborhoods. There is a generational shift for Surinamese and Antilleans, while the Turks and Moroccans born in Amsterdam are as likely as the immigrant generation to settle in ethnic minority neighborhoods. [source]


Characterization of polymorphic microsatellites in the logrunner, Orthonyx temminckii (Aves: Orthonychidae)

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, Issue 6 2007
JAMES A. NICHOLLS
Abstract We isolated and characterized 10 polymorphic microsatellite loci in the logrunner (Orthonyx temminckii), a rainforest-dwelling Australian bird. The number of alleles per locus observed within two populations ranged from three to 39, with observed heterozygosities of between 0.12 and 1.00. We demonstrate that these markers are useful for both population- and individual-level analyses. [source]


Understanding Disparities in Transplantation: Do Social Networks Provide the Missing Clue?

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 3 2010
K. Ladin
Although the National Organ Transplant Act calls for equity in access to transplantation, scarcity and racial disparities persist. To date, even the most comprehensive models have been unable to adequately explain these racial disparities, leaving policymakers unsure how best to intervene. Previous individual-level analyses, which have implicated risk factors such as race, financial status, cultural beliefs, unemployment, lack of commitment to surgery and lack of continuous access to care, overlook contextual and social network exposures. Social networks present a compelling way to examine cumulative risk clustered across individuals. Social networks have been shown to influence health outcomes and health behaviors through various pathways, including shared social capital, engaging in similar or group risky behaviors, diffusion of information and adopting or propagating social norms. Precursors to chronic kidney disease, including obesity, have been shown to spread through social networks. Social network analysis can reveal shared risks between potential donors and recipients in a given network, clarifying the likelihood of finding an appropriate match through either direct donation or paired exchanges. This paper presents a novel application of social network analysis to transplantation, illustrating implications for disparities and future clinical interventions. [source]