102 research outputs found

    A Comparative Study of Depression, Anxiety and Stress in Australian and Chinese Business Students.

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    This study reports the results of a survey of 167 undergraduate business students at a major Australian university. Using the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS), it was found that Chinese international students displayed significantly higher levels of stress and anxiety than local, Australian students, both of which fell within the “moderately severe” category. Levels of depression were normal in both groups with no significant differences between them. Qualitative analysis of an open-ended item suggested that the main stressors for Chinese students included academic, life balance and family stressors. Implications for student wellbeing are discussed and organisational initiatives for addressing these complaints are suggested

    The role of individual values and westernisation on the Guanxi orientation of Hong Kong managers

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    Guanxi, or social connections, has received increasing attention in the literature as the Western world grapples with the complexity of doing business with China. But is guanxi a good or a bad thing? Networking and connections are seen as a business necessity, but on the other hand guanxi is often associated with corruption and calculative means of doing business. This study examines different dimensions of guanxi and their relationship to traditional vs modern value orientations. The study finds guanxi comprises two dimensions, one representing traditional Chinese values of reciprocity and face and the other a more modern networking style not dissimilar to that emphasised in the West. Relationships between dimensions of guanxi orientation and individual values and Westernisation are reported

    Cultural differences in attitudes toward plagiarism in undergraduate business students: An empirical investigation

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    This study examines attitudes towards plagiarism in Australian and Chinese (PRC) students and the extent to which they have, or someone they have known has, experienced it. A combination of questionnaire and scenario response was used and the results statistically analysed. The results indicate that Chinese students were more tolerant towards plagiarism than the Australian students and more likely to take part in it, or know someone who had. Although results were in most cases statistically significant, they were not sufficiently strong to indicate unqualified support for a cultural imperative in relation to plagiarism. Results indicate a greater need for plagiarism education for students and that this may need reinforcement throughout the education process

    Guanxi and the ethical judgements and moral reasoning of Hong Kong managers

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    The importance of personal connections and relationships, or guanxi , when doing business with the Chinese is widely acknowledged amongst Western academics and business managers alike. However, aspects of guanxi related behaviours in the workplace are often misunderstood by Westerners with some going so far as to equate guanxi with forms of corruption. This study investigates the underlying modes of moral reasoning in ethical decisions relating to aspects of guanxi, amongst Hong Kong managers. Managers ethical judgements and underlying moral reasoning relating to a series of guanxi related behaviours, were recorded. Content analysis yielded categories that correspond with categories of moral reasoning described in Kohlberg s (1969) model. As hypothesised, it was found that harsher ethical evaluations of guanxi-related behaviours were positively correlated with the stage of moral reasoning. The most common types of reasoning were those corresponding to Kohlberg s stages four and five which relate to moral reasoning based on law and order, and on reason rather than emotion. Stage six, concerned with universal moral principles, was utilized considerably less than other stages. This finding supports the literature on ethical ideology across countries and cultures whereby Eastern cultures are generally found to be more relativistic or less universal than their Western counterparts

    Core-Genome Multilocus Sequence Typing for Epidemiological and Evolutionary Analyses of Phytopathogenic Xanthomonas citri

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    Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri is the cause of bacterial citrus canker, responsible for major economic losses to the citrus industry. X. citri subspecies and pathovars are responsible for diseases in soybean, common bean, mango, pomegranate, and cashew. X. citri disease has been tracked using several typing methods, but recent studies using genomic sequencing have been key to understanding the evolutionary relationships within the species, including fundamental differences among X. citri subsp. citri pathotypes. Here, we describe a core-genome multilocus sequence typing (cgMLST) scheme for X. citri based on 250 genomes comprising multiple examples of X. citri subsp. citri pathotypes A, A*, and Aw; X. citri subsp. malvacearum; X. citri pv. aurantifolii, pv. fuscans, pv. glycines, pv. mangiferaeindicae, pv. viticola, and pv. vignicola; and single isolates of X. citri pv. dieffenbachiae and pv. punicae. This data set included genomic sequencing of 100 novel X. citri subsp. citri isolates. cgMLST, based on 1,618 core genes across 250 genomes, is implemented at PubMLST (https://pubmlst.org/organisms/xanthomonas-citri/). GrapeTree minimum-spanning tree and Interactive Tree of Life (iTOL) neighbor-joining phylogenies generated from the cgMLST data resolved almost identical groupings of isolates to a core-genome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based neighbor-joining phylogeny. These resolved identical groupings of X. citri subsp. citri pathotypes and X. citri subspecies and pathovars. X. citri cgMLST should prove to be an increasingly valuable resource for the study of this key species of plant-pathogenic bacteria. Users can submit genomic data and associated metadata for comparison with previously characterized isolates at PubMLST to allow the rapid characterization of the local, national, and global epidemiology of these pathogens and examine evolutionary relationships

    Dual task interference during gait in patients with unilateral vestibular disorders

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Vestibular patients show slower and unsteady gait; they have also been shown to need greater cognitive resources when carrying out balance and cognitive dual tasks (DT). This study investigated DT interference during gait in a middle-aged group of subjects with dizziness and unsteadiness after unilateral vestibular neuronitis and in a healthy control group.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Fourteen individuals with subacute unilateral vestibular impairment after neuronitis and seventeen healthy subjects performed gait and cognitive tasks in single and DT conditions. A statistical gait analysis system was used and spatio-temporal parameters were considered. The cognitive task, consisting of backward counting by three, was tape recorded and the number of right figures was then calculated.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Both patients and controls showed a more conservative gait during DT and between groups significant differences were not found. A significant decrease in cognitive performance during DT was found only in the vestibular group.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Results suggest that less attentional resources are available during gait in vestibular patients compared to controls, and that a priority is given in keeping up the motor task to the detriment of a decrease of the cognitive performance during DT.</p

    Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Habitat Selection in Female-Calf Humpback Whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) Pairs on the Hawaiian Breeding Grounds

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    The Au'au Channel between the islands of Maui and Lanai, Hawaii comprises critical breeding habitat for humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) of the Central North Pacific stock. However, like many regions where marine mega-fauna gather, these waters are also the focus of a flourishing local eco-tourism and whale watching industry. Our aim was to establish current trends in habitat preference in female-calf humpback whale pairs within this region, focusing specifically on the busy, eastern portions of the channel. We used an equally-spaced zigzag transect survey design, compiled our results in a GIS model to identify spatial trends and calculated Neu's Indices to quantify levels of habitat use. Our study revealed that while mysticete female-calf pairs on breeding grounds typically favor shallow, inshore waters, female-calf pairs in the Au'au Channel avoided shallow waters (<20 m) and regions within 2 km of the shoreline. Preferred regions for female-calf pairs comprised water depths between 40–60 m, regions of rugged bottom topography and regions that lay between 4 and 6 km from a small boat harbor (Lahaina Harbor) that fell within the study area. In contrast to other humpback whale breeding grounds, there was only minimal evidence of typical patterns of stratification or segregation according to group composition. A review of habitat use by maternal females across Hawaiian waters indicates that maternal habitat choice varies between localities within the Hawaiian Islands, suggesting that maternal females alter their use of habitat according to locally varying pressures. This ability to respond to varying environments may be the key that allows wildlife species to persist in regions where human activity and critical habitat overlap

    Like mother, like child : investigating perinatal and maternal health stress in post-medieval London.

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    Post-Medieval London (sixteenth-nineteenth centuries) was a stressful environment for the poor. Overcrowded and squalid housing, physically demanding and risky working conditions, air and water pollution, inadequate diet and exposure to infectious diseases created high levels of morbidity and low life expectancy. All of these factors pressed with particular severity on the lowest members of the social strata, with burgeoning disparities in health between the richest and poorest. Foetal, perinatal and infant skeletal remains provide the most sensitive source of bioarchaeological information regarding past population health and in particular maternal well-being. This chapter examined the evidence for chronic growth and health disruption in 136 foetal, perinatal and infant skeletons from four low-status cemetery samples in post-medieval London. The aim of this study was to consider the impact of poverty on the maternal-infant nexus, through an analysis of evidence of growth disruption and pathological lesions. The results highlight the dire consequences of poverty in London during this period from the very earliest moments of life
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