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Essays in Behavioral Economics and Microeconomic TheoryVorjohann, Pauline Lisa 29 September 2022 (has links)
Kapitel 1: Im Rahmen des Erwartungsnutzenmodells
leite ich ein theoretisches Modell von choice bracketing
aus zwei verhaltensökonomischen Axiomen ab. Das erste etabliert
einen direkten Zusammenhang zwischen narrow bracketing und correlation
neglect. Das zweite identifiziert den Referenzpunkt als den Ort, an
dem broad und narrow Präferenzen miteinander verbunden sind. In meinem
Modell ist der narrow bracketer durch die Unfähigkeit, Veränderungen vom
Referenzpunkt in unterschiedlichen Dimensionen gleichzeitig zu verarbeiten,
charakterisiert.
Kapitel 2: Warum geben Menschen, wenn man
sie fragt, präferieren aber, nicht gefragt zu werden, und nehmen sogar, wenn
sich die Gelegenheit ergibt? Wir zeigen, dass Axiome wie Separabilität, narrow
bracketing, und scaling invariance diese scheinbar widersprüchlichen
Beobachtungen vorhersagen. Insbesondere implizieren diese Axiome, dass
die Interdependenz von Präferenzen (“Altruismus”) ein Ergebnis des Interesses
für das Wohlbefinden anderer im Gegensatz zu ihren bloßen Auszahlungen
ist. Hierbei wird das Wohlbefinden durch die referenzabhängige Wertfunktion
aus der Prospekttheorie erfasst.
Kapitel 3: Wir untersuchen,
wie sich fake news auf den Informationsfluss zwischen Nachrichtenportalen
und ökonomischen Agenten auswirkt. Wir erweitern das klassische cheaptalk-
Modell um Unsicherheit über die Präferenzen des sender (Nachrichtenportal).
Es gibt zwei Typen von Nachrichtenportalen. Ein fake-news-Portal
möchte im Agenten unabhängig vom wahren Zustand eine maximale Erwartung
wecken. Ein legitimes Nachrichtenportal möchte die Wahrheit offenbaren.
Wir zeigen, dass jedes informative perfekte Bayesianische Gleichgewicht durch
einen Schwellenwert charakterisiert ist. Während der Agent alle Zustände
unter dem Schwellenwert unterscheiden kann, ist es ihm unmöglich, Zustände
über dem Schwellenwert zu unterscheiden. / Chapter 1: I derive a theoretical
model of choice bracketing from two behavioral axioms in an expected utility
framework. The first behavioral axiom establishes a direct link between narrow
bracketing and correlation neglect. The second behavioral axiom identifies
the reference point as the place where broad and narrow preferences are
connected. In my model, the narrow bracketer is characterized by an inability
to process changes from the reference point in different dimensions simultaneously.
Chapter 2: Why do people give when asked, but
prefer not to be asked, and even take when possible? We show that standard
behavioral axioms including separability, narrow bracketing, and scaling invariance
predict these seemingly inconsistent observations. Specifically, these
axioms imply that interdependence of preferences (“altruism”) results from
concerns for the welfare of others, as opposed to their mere payoffs, where
individual welfares are captured by the reference-dependent value functions
known from prospect theory. The resulting preferences are non-convex, which
captures giving, sorting, and taking directly.
Chapter 3: We present a theoretical
model to investigate how the presence of fake news affects information
transmission from media outlets to economic agents. In a standard cheap talk
framework we introduce uncertainty about the sender’s (media outlet’s) preferences.
There are two types of media outlets. A fake news outlet wants to
push the agent’s belief to the maximum irrespective of the state of the world.
A legitimate outlet wants to reveal the true state to the agent. We show that
any informative perfect Bayesian equilibrium of our game is characterized
by a threshold value. While the agent can perfectly separate amongst states
below the threshold value, there is no separation amongst states above the
threshold value. We determine the unique most informative threshold value
for a general class of equilibria.
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Mozambican women's experience of labour painVilakati, Cynthia Zodwa 30 November 2003 (has links)
The study sought to describe Mozambican women's experience of labour pain. The study sought to determine the manner in which labour pain is perceived and to determine the culturally acceptable behaviour of Mozambican women as they experience labour pain. The preferred pain relief measures and cultural practices and beliefs pertaining to labour pain by this cultural group were also studied.
The major inferences drawn from this study are that during labour, Mozambican women mainly respond stoically to the experience of labour. They also exhibited different kinds of behaviour in response to labour pain, such as rubbing the painful site, tossing about in bed, and verbalisation. The implication of the study is that Swazi nurse-midwives should render culture congruent maternity care to the women during labour. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)
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Mozambican women's experience of labour painVilakati, Cynthia Zodwa 30 November 2003 (has links)
The study sought to describe Mozambican women's experience of labour pain. The study sought to determine the manner in which labour pain is perceived and to determine the culturally acceptable behaviour of Mozambican women as they experience labour pain. The preferred pain relief measures and cultural practices and beliefs pertaining to labour pain by this cultural group were also studied.
The major inferences drawn from this study are that during labour, Mozambican women mainly respond stoically to the experience of labour. They also exhibited different kinds of behaviour in response to labour pain, such as rubbing the painful site, tossing about in bed, and verbalisation. The implication of the study is that Swazi nurse-midwives should render culture congruent maternity care to the women during labour. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)
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Business process resource networks : a multi-theoretical study of continuous organisational transformationStebbings, H. January 2016 (has links)
Drawing on multiple theoretical lenses, this research studies continuous transformation, or ‘morphing’, of a business process resource network (BPRN). The aim is to further our understanding of continuous organisational change at the lowest levels of analysis within an organisation: that is, at the resource level, and that resource’s relationships to other resources as they exist within a BPRN. Data was gathered from a single, in depth case study. Analysis was achieved by means of mapping BPRN evolution using ‘temporal bracketing’, ‘visual’ and ‘narrative’ approaches (Langley, 1999). The analysis revealed two mechanisms that appear to govern microstate morphing: bond strength and stakeholder expectation. In addition, four factors emerged as important: environmental turbulence, timing and timeliness of changes, concurrency of changes, and enduring business logic. An emergent model of microstate morphing which acknowledges the importance of socio-materiality in actor network morphogenesis (ANM) is presented. This study shows how effective relationships and configuration of resources within the BPRN can be achieved to facilitate timely, purposeful morphing. Five propositions are offered from the emergent ANM model. Specifically, these relate to the conditional operating parameters and the identified generative mechanisms for continuous organisational transformation within the BPRN. Implications for practice are significant. A heuristic discussion guide containing a series of questions framed around the ANM model to highlight the challenges of microstate morphing for practitioners is proposed. Two routes for future research are suggested: replication studies, and quantifying BPRN change in relation to an organisation’s environment using a ii survey instrument and inferential statistical analysis based on the ANM model features and propositions.
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Experiences of child psychiatric nurses : an ecosystemic studyVan Rooyen, Matthys Johannes 08 1900 (has links)
This dissertation reports on the lived experiences of four child psychiatric nurses. The
territory of child psychiatric nursing is explored in this investigation through the
punctuation of many voices within this field of study. The methodology of the
investigation is descriptive phenomenology and Colaizzis’ steps in descriptive
phenomenology (map) are used to discover and describe the different template theories
(the territory) that are unique to each of the four child psychiatric nurses who were
interviewed. Following this, a story is punctuated, which is referred to as the structural
synthesis. It is the heartbeat of the investigation. The dissertation concludes by reflecting
on the paradox of how the invisibility of the child psychiatric nurses allowed for the
visibility of the dissertation and encourages the reader to ask pivotal questions about the
important role of the child psychiatric nurse, working as part of a multidisciplinary team,
in order to improve patient care. / Psychology / M.A. (Clinical psychology)
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Experiences of child psychiatric nurses : an ecosystemic studyVan Rooyen, Matthys Johannes 08 1900 (has links)
This dissertation reports on the lived experiences of four child psychiatric nurses. The
territory of child psychiatric nursing is explored in this investigation through the
punctuation of many voices within this field of study. The methodology of the
investigation is descriptive phenomenology and Colaizzis’ steps in descriptive
phenomenology (map) are used to discover and describe the different template theories
(the territory) that are unique to each of the four child psychiatric nurses who were
interviewed. Following this, a story is punctuated, which is referred to as the structural
synthesis. It is the heartbeat of the investigation. The dissertation concludes by reflecting
on the paradox of how the invisibility of the child psychiatric nurses allowed for the
visibility of the dissertation and encourages the reader to ask pivotal questions about the
important role of the child psychiatric nurse, working as part of a multidisciplinary team,
in order to improve patient care. / Psychology / M.A. (Clinical psychology)
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