138 research outputs found
The effects of social information on the enjoyment of online videos: An eye tracking study on the role of attention
The effects of social information on the enjoyment of online videos: An eye tracking study on the role of attention
Recent experiments showed that the valence of user comments (i.e., social information) presented alongside online videos can alter viewersâ enjoyment of videos. However, it is unclear how much attention video viewers pay to social information and whether the effects found in previous studies occur if participants are not forced to view the social information. Therefore, this study investigated how the valence of social information presented alongside online videos affects viewersâ enjoyment when viewers are free to determine whether and how much attention they pay to social information. Using an eye tracker, we found that most video viewers pay attention to social information which then elicits a valence effect on their enjoyment. Results also showed that a negativity bias occurred: Participants paid most attention to negative social information. Accordingly, the effect of social information on enjoyment was stronger for negative social information. This study is the first to show that social information of online videos affects the experiences of video viewers in settings where viewers are in charge of how much attention they pay to social information
A social identity perspective on the effect of social information on online video enjoyment
To date, videos are often presented on social media platforms where they are accompanied by social information in the form of user comments. Research suggests that this social information can alter viewersâ video enjoyment. The present study aimed to learn more about two factors that may enhance this effect by conducting a 2x2 between-subjects experiment with a control group (N = 290, Mage = 20.82, SDage = 2.49) in the Netherlands. First, we investigated the role that the source of social information (i.e., in-group vs. out-group) plays in the effect of social information. Second, we explored how writing a comment while watching a video (i.e., commenting vs. no commenting) may alter the effect of the source of social information. Results indicated that social information created by in-group members is more influential than social information created by out-group members. However, writing a comment did not increase viewersâ susceptibility to the effects of social information. These results are discussed in light of the social identity framework, leading to new insights into what may bolster the effect of social information on video enjoyment when individuals watch videos presented on social media
Sharing the fun?:How social information affects viewersâ video enjoyment and video evaluations
Phase transition of meshwork models for spherical membranes
We have studied two types of meshwork models by using the canonical Monte
Carlo simulation technique. The first meshwork model has elastic junctions,
which are composed of vertices, bonds, and triangles, while the second model
has rigid junctions, which are hexagonal (or pentagonal) rigid plates.
Two-dimensional elasticity is assumed only at the elastic junctions in the
first model, and no two-dimensional bending elasticity is assumed in the second
model. Both of the meshworks are of spherical topology. We find that both
models undergo a first-order collapsing transition between the smooth spherical
phase and the collapsed phase. The Hausdorff dimension of the smooth phase is
H\simeq 2 in both models as expected. It is also found that H\simeq 2 in the
collapsed phase of the second model, and that H is relatively larger than 2 in
the collapsed phase of the first model, but it remains in the physical bound,
i.e., H<3. Moreover, the first model undergoes a discontinuous surface
fluctuation transition at the same transition point as that of the collapsing
transition, while the second model undergoes a continuous transition of surface
fluctuation. This indicates that the phase structure of the meshwork model is
weakly dependent on the elasticity at the junctions.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure
Position statement on the role of healthcare professionals, patient organizations and industry in European Reference Networks
A call from the EU for the set-up of European Reference Networks (ERNs) is expected to be launched in the first quarter of 2016. ERNs are intended to improve the care for patients with low prevalent or rare diseases throughout the EU by, among other things, facilitating the pooling and exchange of experience and knowledge and the development of protocols and guidelines. In the past, for example where costly orphan drugs have been concerned, industry has played an important role in facilitating consensus meetings and publication of guidelines. The ERNs should provide a unique opportunity for healthcare professionals and patients to lead these activities in an independent way. However, currently costs for networking activities are not to be covered by EU funds and alternative sources of funding are being explored. There is growing concern that any involvement of the industry in the funding of ERNs and their core activities may create a risk of undue influence. To date, the European Commission has not been explicit in how industry will be engaged in ERNs. We believe that public funding and a conflict of interest policy are needed at the level of the ERNs, Centers of Expertise (CEs), healthcare professionals and patient organizations with the aim of maintaining scientific integrity and independence. Specific attention is needed where it concerns the development of clinical practice guidelines. A proposal for a conflict of interest policy is presented, which may support the development of a framework to facilitate collaboration, safeguard professional integrity and to establish and maintain public acceptability and trust among patients, their organizations and the general public
The WOCEâera 3âD Pacific Ocean circulation and heat budget
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Progress In Oceanography 82 (2009): 281-325, doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2009.08.002.To address questions concerning the intensity and spatial structure of the 3âdimensional
circulation within the Pacific Ocean and the associated advective and diffusive property flux
divergences, data from approximately 3000 highâquality hydrographic stations collected on
40 zonal and meridional cruises have been merged into a physically consistent model. The
majority of the stations were occupied as part of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment
(WOCE), which took place in the 1990s. These data are supplemented by a few preâWOCE
surveys of similar quality, and timeâaveraged directâvelocity and historical hydrographic
measurements about the equator.
An inverse box model formalism is employed to estimate the absolute alongâisopycnal
velocity field, the magnitude and spatial distribution of the associated diapycnal flow and
the corresponding diapycnal advective and diffusive property flux divergences. The resulting
largeâscale WOCE Pacific circulation can be described as two shallow overturning cells
at midâ to low latitudes, one in each hemisphere, and a single deep cell which brings abyssal
waters from the Southern Ocean into the Pacific where they upwell across isopycnals and
are returned south as deep waters. Upwelling is seen to occur throughout most of the basin
with generally larger dianeutral transport and greater mixing occurring at depth. The derived
pattern of ocean heat transport divergence is compared to published results based
on airâsea flux estimates. The synthesis suggests a strongly east/west oriented pattern of
airâsea heat flux with heat loss to the atmosphere throughout most of the western basins,
and a gain of heat throughout the tropics extending poleward through the eastern basins.
The calculated meridional heat transport agrees well with previous hydrographic estimates.
Consistent with many of the climatologies at a variety of latitudes as well, our meridional
heat transport estimates tend toward lower values in both hemispheres.This work was funded by National Science Foundation grants OCEâ9710102, OCEâ
9712209 and OCEâ0079383, and also benefited from work on closely related projects funded
by NSF grants OCEâ0223421 and OCEâ0623261, and NOAA grant NA17RJ1223 funded
through CICOR. For G.C.J. NASA funding came under Order Wâ19,314
UltramicroELISA indirecto para la deteccion de anticuerpos totales a citomegalovirus en suero humano
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