38 research outputs found
ADAM17/EGFR axis promotes transglutaminase-dependent skin barrier formation through phosholipase C gamma 1 and protein kinase C pathways
This work was supported by the German Research Foundation DFG (SFB 850/B6) and by the Fritz-Thyssen
foundation (Az.10.14.2.150) to C.-W.F and the Medical Research Council (MR/L010402/1) to D.P.K
Loss-of-Function Mutations in SERPINB8 Linked to Exfoliative Ichthyosis with Impaired Mechanical Stability of Intercellular Adhesions
M.P. is supported by a Fellowship from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. This work was supported in part by a generous donation of Israel and Ruthi Ram (E.S.) and from a British Heart Foundation Programme grant (D.P.K.)
Exome Sequencing and Rare Variant Analysis Reveals Multiple Filaggrin Mutations in Bangladeshi Families with Atopic Eczema and Additional Risk Genes
M.P was supported by a Fellowship from the German Research Foundation (DFG).
This work received infrastructure support through the DFG Cluster of Excellence
“Inflammation at Interfaces” (grants EXC306 and EXC306/2), and was supported by grants
(WE2678/6-1, WE2678/6-2, WE2678/9) from the DFG and the e:Med sysINFLAME grant
no. 01ZX1306A from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).
J.E.A.C. and X.F.C.C.W. are funded by A*STAR SPF funding for translational skin research
and genetic orphan disease
The Limits to Moral Erosion in Markets: Social Norms and the Replacement Excuse
This paper studies the impact of a key feature of competitive markets on moral behavior: the possibility that a competitor will step in and conclude the deal if a conscientious market actor forgoes a profitable business opportunity for ethical reasons. We study experimentally whether people employ the argument "if I don’t do it, someone else will" to justify taking a narrowly self-interested action. Our data reveal a clear pattern. Subjects do not employ the "replacement excuse" if a social norm exists that classifies the selfish action as immoral. But if no social norm exists, subjects are more inclined to take a selfish action in situations where another subject can otherwise take it. By demonstrating the importance of social norms of moral behavior for limiting the power of the replacement excuse, our paper informs the long-standing debate on the effect of markets on morals