1,442 research outputs found
Can Centralized Sanctioning Promote Trust in Social Dilemmas? A Two-level Trust Game with Incomplete Information
The problem of trust is a paradigmatic social dilemma. Previous literature has paid much academic attention on effects of peer punishment and altruistic third-party punishment on trust and human cooperation in dyadic interactions. However, the effects of centralized sanctioning institutions on decentralized reciprocity in hierarchical interactions remain to be further explored. This paper presents a formal two-level trust game with incomplete information which adds an authority as a strategic purposive actor into the traditional trust game. This model allows scholars to examine the problem of trust in more complex game theoretic configurations. The analysis demonstrates how the centralized institutions might change the dynamics of reciprocity between the trustor and the trustee. Findings suggest that the sequential equilibria of the newly proposed two-level model simultaneously include the risk of placing trust for the trustor and the temptation of short-term defection for the trustee. Moreover, they have shown that even a slight uncertainty about the type of the newly introduced authority might facilitate the establishment of trust and reciprocity in social dilemmas.published_or_final_versio
One Country, Two EIA Systems: the public engagement in the EIA systems of Hong Kong and China
INTRODUCTION: The paper examines two distinctive Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) practices in the aspects of public engagement process applied in Hong Kong and China mainland. Under the “One Country, Two Systems” governance framework, Hong Kong enjoys high level of autonomy. Due to the unique historical background, the practices of environmental management between the two places are different. This paper uses the EIA of Shenzhen Western Corridor project, a trans-boundary EIA (TEIA) between Hong Kong and Shenzhen, to compare and contrast the institutional setting of EIA system in Hong Kong and China mainland in terms of public engagement process. The paper ends with a disc…postprin
Joint Effects of Asymmetric Payoff and Reciprocity Mechanisms on Collective Cooperation in Water Sharing Interactions: A Game Theoretic Perspective
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The Transformation Of Trust In China’s Alternative Food Networks: Disruption, Reconstruction, And Development
Food safety issues in China have received much scholarly attention, yet few studies systematically examined this matter through the lens of trust. More importantly, little is known about the transformation of different types of trust in the dynamic process of food production, provision, and consumption. We consider trust as an evolving interdependent relationship between different actors. We used the Beijing County Fair, a prominent ecological farmers’ market in China, as an example to examine the transformation of trust in China’s alternative food networks. We argue that although there has been a disruption of institutional trust among the general public since 2008 when the melamine-tainted milk scandal broke out, reconstruction of individual trust and development of organizational trust have been observed, along with the emergence and increasing popularity of alternative food networks. Based on more than six months of fieldwork on the emerging ecological agriculture sector in 13 provinces across China as well as monitoring of online discussions and posts, we analyze how various social factors—including but not limited to direct and indirect reciprocity, information, endogenous institutions, and altruism—have simultaneously contributed to the transformation of trust in China’s alternative food networks. The findings not only complement current social theories of trust, but also highlight an important yet understudied phenomenon whereby informal social mechanisms have been partially substituting for formal institutions and gradually have been building trust against the backdrop of the food safety crisis in China.published_or_final_versio
Chemical Printing of Biological Tissue by Gold Nanoparticle-Assisted Laser Ablation
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Burden And Pattern Of Cancer In Western Kenya
Background: Cancer regisries worldwide have evolved to provide useful information on the burden and diversity of the patterns of cancer, information that is vital for establishing appropriate programmes for disease management. Population based data on cancer in western Kenya as captured in the Eldoret cancer registry established in1999 is analysed and reported in this paper.Objective: To determine the burden and pattern of cancer in Western Kenya by use of data from the Eldoret cancer registry.Design: Retrospective study.Setting: The cancer registry located in the Department of Haematology at the Moi University, School of Medicine situated at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital, Eldoret, Kenya. The hospital has a catchment population of 13 to 15 million people forming about 40% of the Kenyan population.Results: A total of 5,366 patients were diagnosed to have cancer and attended to at the MTRH and other hospitals in Eldoret during the period between January 1999 and December 2006 giving an average of 671 cases per year. Among those treated 2,699 were males and 2,667 were females giving a M: F ratio of 1:1. About 21% of the patients had haematological malignancies with non-Hodgkins lymphoma being the most common.Another 79% of the patients had solid tumours with cancer of the oesophagus being the commonest. Cancer of the cervix and prostrate were the commonest among the females and males respectively. A general increase in the number of patients with Kaposis sarcoma associated with HIV/AIDS pandemic was observed.Conclusion: The burden of cancer is a significant health problem in western Kenya and there is need for the development of a comprehensive cancer care programme in the region to address the growing problem
Wetland Habitat Change in the Shenzhen River Cross-boundary Catchment, China
Session: River Ecology (C2A): Beneath the Surfacepublished_or_final_versio
Phase equilibria in the Fe-Mo-Ti ternary system at 1000 °C
An isothermal section of the Fe-Mo-Ti ternary system at 1000 °C has been constructed using data acquired from a series of seven alloys. The limit of solubility of Fe in the continuous A2 phase field between Ti and Mo has been determined, as have the extents to which Mo may be accommodated in the B2 TiFe phase, and Ti in the D8 FeMo phase. The B2, D8 and C14 Fe (Ti, Mo) intermetallics were found to have limited tolerance for non-stoichiometric compositions. The positions of the A2 + B2 + C14 and A2 + C14 + D8 three-phase fields were determined, along with the extents of the A2 + B2, A2 + D8, A2 + C14, C14 + B2 and C14 + D8 two-phase fields. No ternary phases were observed in any of the alloys studied.This work was support by the Rolls-Royce/EPSRC Strategic Partnership under EP/H022309/1, EP/H500375/1 and EP/M005607/1.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2016.07.00
Study of motoring operation of in-wheel switched reluctance motor drives for electric vehicles
Author name used in this publication: X. D. XueAuthor name used in this publication: K. W. E. ChengAuthor name used in this publication: N. C. CheungAuthor name used in this publication: Z. ZhangAuthor name used in this publication: J. K. LinRefereed conference paper2008-2009 > Academic research: refereed > Refereed conference paperVersion of RecordPublishe
Effects of adrenomedullin on the expression of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in oviducts from women with tubal ectopic pregnancy: an in-vitro experimental study
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