Search results for "Preference"

showing 10 items of 819 documents

Data Transmission and Thermo-Optic Tuning Performance of Dielectric-Loaded Plasmonic Structures Hetero-Integrated on a Silicon Chip

2012

We demonstrate experimental evidence of the data capture and the low-energy thermo-optic tuning credentials of dielectric-loaded plasmonic structures integrated on a silicon chip. We show 7-nm thermo-optical tuning of a plasmonic racetrack-resonator with less than 3.3 mW required electrical power and verify error-free 10-Gb/s transmission through a 60-mu m-long dielectric-loaded plasmonic waveguide. We demonstrate experimental evidence of the data capture and the low-energy thermo-optic tuning credentials of dielectric-loaded plasmonic structures integrated on a silicon chip. We show 7-nm thermo-optical tuning of a plasmonic racetrack-resonator with less than 3.3 mW required electrical powe…

EXPRESSIONMaterials scienceSiliconGPR120PREFERENCEchemistry.chemical_elementPhysics::Optics02 engineering and technologyDielectric01 natural sciencesRATS010309 opticsALPHA-GUSTDUCIN0103 physical sciencesSensitivity (control systems)DIETARY LIPIDSElectrical and Electronic EngineeringPlasmonRECEPTORbusiness.industry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyACIDSAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsMICEchemistryPlasmonic waveguideTransmission (telecommunications)Silicon chipOptoelectronicsSENSITIVITY0210 nano-technologybusinessData transmission
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2021

Children’s preference for fruit and vegetables must emerge during childhood. At children’s homes, mothers and fathers influence children’s developing food preferences with their own preferences and actions. The purpose of the study was to reveal the association parents have with their children’s fruit and vegetable preferences. The study was conducted in a sample of Finnish mothers and fathers of 3–5-year-old children. The participants were recruited, and questionnaires distributed through early childhood education and care centers in 2014 and 2015. The results showed considerable variance in the children’s preferences, and were more similar with their father’s, than their mother’s preferen…

Early childhood education0303 health sciencesHealth (social science)030309 nutrition & dieteticsNeophobiaPlant Sciencemedicine.diseaseHealth Professions (miscellaneous)MicrobiologyPreference03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicine030212 general & internal medicinePsychologyAssociation (psychology)Food ScienceDemographyFoods
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Modelling distribution and habitat preferences of vulnerable species

2011

Ecological Modelling habitat preferences vulnerable speciesSettore BIO/05 - Zoologia
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Interspecific Social Learning: Novel Preference Can Be Acquired from a Competing Species

2007

SummaryNongenetic transmission of behavioral traits via social learning allows local traditions in humans, and, controversially, in other animals [1–4]. Social learning is usually studied as an intraspecific phenomenon (but see [5–7]). However, other species with some overlap in ecology can be more than merely potential competitors: prior settlement and longer residence can render them preferable sources of information [8]. Socially induced acquisition of choices or preferences capitalizes upon the knowledge of presumably better-informed individuals [9] and should be adaptive under many natural circumstances [10, 11]. Here we show with a field experiment that females of two migrant flycatch…

Ecological nicheAgricultural and Biological Sciences(all)EcologyBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)Ecology (disciplines)Interspecific competitionBiologySocial learningImitative BehaviorGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPreferenceIntraspecific competitionNesting BehaviorSongbirdsHabitatNestAnimalsLearningFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSocial BehaviorSYSNEUROEcosystemCurrent Biology
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Colour reverse learning and animal personalities: the advantage of behavioural diversity assessed with agent-based simulations

2012

Foraging bees use colour cues to help identify rewarding from unrewarding flowers, but as conditions change, bees may require behavioural flexibility to reverse their learnt preferences. Perceptually similar colours are learnt slowly by honeybees and thus potentially pose a difficult task to reverse-learn. Free-flying honeybees (N = 32) were trained to learn a fine colour discrimination task that could be resolved at ca. 70% accuracy following extended differential conditioning, and were then tested for their ability to reverse-learn this visual problem multiple times. Subsequent analyses identified three different strategies: ‘Deliberative-decisive’ bees that could, after sev…

EcologyComputer sciencebusiness.industryForagingFlexibility (personality)Personality psychologyPreferenceTask (project management)NectarGeneral Materials ScienceArtificial intelligencebusinessDiversity (business)Cognitive psychologyReverse learningNeuroscience
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Rail freight transport and demand requirements : an analysis of attribute cut-offs through a stated preference experiment

2014

This paper analyses the choice between road and rail in Spain where rail market share for freight is still residual. Discrete choice models are estimated with data obtained through a two-phase fieldwork, thus allowing us to carry out a stated preference efficient design for each interviewee. We analyse the existence of attribute cut-offs and the presence of a segment of the population with a zero value of frequency. Our results show that ignoring the existence of cut-offs and segments of the population with polarised valuations can lead to erroneous conclusions in terms of the possibilities of rail for absorbing significant quota.

Economia internacionalRail freight transportPopulation0211 other engineering and technologiesTransportation02 engineering and technologyDevelopmentResidualMicroeconomicsMixed logit0502 economics and businessEconomicsstated preference experimentsMarket shareeducationPreference (economics)Civil and Structural Engineering050210 logistics & transportationeducation.field_of_studyDiscrete choicebusiness.industry05 social sciences021107 urban & regional planningmixed logitattribute cut-offsfootnote Informationfreight transportzero-valuationValue (economics)business
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Choices and Enrollments in French Secondary and Higher Education: Repercussions for Second-Generation Immigrants

2013

En ligne sur http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.1086/670729?uid=16804784&uid=3738016&uid=2129&uid=2134&uid=2&uid=70&uid=3&uid=67&uid=16735408&uid=62&uid=5909928&sid=21102655856551; International audience; In France, the proportion of second-generation immigrants enrolling in tertiary education has increased as education has undergone a process of "democratization." This article analyzes their postsecondary choices, access to tertiary programs, dropout, and transition to the labor market, compared to those of students of French origin. Youths of Portuguese origin are more likely to enter vocational higher programs concordant with their preferences and have better chances of completing a tertia…

Economic growthImmigrationLabor market050602 political science & public administrationSociologyDemocratizationAccès à l'enseignement supérieurmedia_common4. EducationDropoutDegree completion05 social sciences050301 educationEnfant de migrant[ SHS.EDU ] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationPreference0506 political scienceVocational education8. Economic growthlanguageEnseignement secondaireFranceChoix des étudesTransition to the labor marketaccess to higher educationHigher educationmedia_common.quotation_subject[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Educationeducation[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationSocial classEnseignement supérieurEducationDémocratisation de l'enseignementPostsecondary choiceUniversitybusiness.industrySecond-generation ImmigrantInsertion professionnelleTertiary educationdemocratizationInégalité racialeAbandon des étudeslanguage.human_languageDemographic economicsAccess to tertiary programPortugueseAccess to Higher Educationbusiness0503 education
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Vulnerability, Freedom of Choice and Structural Global Injustices: The “Consent” to Exploitation of Migrant Women Workers

2019

This chapter analyzes the philosophical implications related to the “position of vulnerability” defined by the Directive 2011/36/EU on Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Human Beings and Protecting its Victims as “a situation in which the person concerned has no real or acceptable alternative but to submit to the abuse involved” (art. 2.2). In particular, the chapter focuses on the “choice” made by migrant women employed in care and domestic work and in the agricultural sector in Italy. The Italian labor market is marked by the exploitation of migrant women, especially women from Romania, due to social, economic and legal factors that will be considered from a gender perspective. Women…

Economic growthWomen workersPolitical sciencePerspective (graphical)Freedom of choiceVulnerabilityPosition (finance)DirectivePreferenceEmigration
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The EU-Africa Trade Agreements

2021

This chapter scrutinizes the successive rounds of EU-Africa agreements and the four-tier preference system of the European Union for developing countries, with special attention to the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPA). Full EPAs and interim EPAs are reviewed in terms of the resulting country configurations in Africa and their impact on the officially intended consolidation of African regional communities. The analysis concludes that the artificial EPA configurations do not correspond to any existing REC in Africa. If they last, they will have a very critical effect on Africa’s regional economic integration, all the more as they start to be emulated in other trade agreements between Afr…

Economic integrationConsolidation (business)business.industryInterimPolitical scienceDeveloping countrymedia_common.cataloged_instanceInternational tradeEuropean unionbusinessEconomic Partnership AgreementsPreferencemedia_common
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Dealing with preference uncertainty in contingent willingness to pay for a nature protection program: A new approach

2013

In this paper, we propose an alternative preference uncertainty measurement approach where respondents have the option to indicate their willingness to pay (WTP) for a nature protection program either as exact values or intervals from a payment card, depending on whether they are uncertain about their valuation. On the basis of their responses, we then estimate their degree of uncertainty. New within this study is that the respondent's degree of uncertainty is "revealed", while it is "stated" in those using existing measurement methods. Three statistical models are used to explore the sources of respondent uncertainty. We also present a simple way of calculating the uncertainty adjusted mea…

Economics and Econometrics010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesUncertainty calibrationWillingness to pay0502 economics and businessEconomicsEconometricsWillingness to payContingent valuationPreference uncertaintyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceValuation (finance)Contingent valuation05 social sciencesStatistical modelPayment cardJEL Classification Q20; Q26[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinancePayment cardRespondent[SDE]Environmental SciencesMeasurement uncertaintyA priori and a posteriori050202 agricultural economics & policyNature protection
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