6 research outputs found

    Perceived Relative Income and Preferences for Public Good Provision

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    Guided by a theoretical framework, we study how perceived relative income affects preferences for public goods. In a randomized survey experiment, we inform respondents from India of their official income rank and elicit preferences for air quality, including actual contributions to environmental initiatives. Right-wing supporters withdraw contributions when perceived relative income increases. The effect coincides with diminished health concerns and lower intentions to utilize private protection measures against air pollution. In contrast, center-left supporters do not reduce contributions. A second survey experiment demonstrates the causality of the relationship using a novel treatment that exogenously shifts relative income perceptions

    Strategic Ignorance and Perceived Control

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    Information can trigger unpleasant emotions. As a result, individuals might be tempted to strategically ignore it. We experimentally investigate whether increasing perceived control can mitigate strategic ignorance. Participants from India were presented with a choice to receive information about the health risk associated with air pollution and were later asked to recall it. Perceived control leads to a substantial improvement in information recall. We find that optimists react most to perceived control, both with a reduction in information avoidance and an increase in information recall. This latter result is supported by a US sample. A theoretical framework rationalizes our findings

    Strategic Ignorance and Perceived Control

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    Information can trigger unpleasant emotions. As a result, individuals might be tempted to willfully ignore it. We experimentally investigate whether increasing perceived control can mitigate strategic ignorance. Participants from India were presented with a choice to receive information about the health risk associated with air pollution and later asked to recall it. We find that perceived control leads to a substantial improvement in information retention. Moreover, perceived control mostly benefits optimists, who show both a reduction in information avoidance and an increase in information retention. This latter result is confirmed with a US sample. A theoretical framework rationalizes these findings

    Clustering phenotype populations by genome-wide RNAi and multiparametric imaging

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    How to predict gene function from phenotypic cues is a longstanding question in biology.Using quantitative multiparametric imaging, RNAi-mediated cell phenotypes were measured on a genome-wide scale.On the basis of phenotypic ‘neighbourhoods', we identified previously uncharacterized human genes as mediators of the DNA damage response pathway and the maintenance of genomic integrity.The phenotypic map is provided as an online resource at http://www.cellmorph.org for discovering further functional relationships for a broad spectrum of biological modul

    Financing for Sustainable Development: Emerging Issues and Actors

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    While development finance emerged in the 1950s under a relatively simple narrative of Western industrialized countries aiding the development of the Global South, it has undergone many changes since - both geopolitically and conceptually. The motivation for this thesis is to analyze which changes development finance is currently undergoing and how this affects the way the global community has to approach the financing of sustainable development. In particular, this thesis focuses on three important changes that have added complexity to development finance under the SDGs. These are: Diversity of the donor landscape Multitude of the policy objectives Riskiness of the operating environment While this list is by no means exclusive, it offers insight on how donors and recipients of today's development finance have to deal with changes at multiple levels simultaneously
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