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The Big Five Inventory–15p (BFI-15p) is a relatively new 15-item version developed for Hispanic populations; however, evidence of its cross-cultural equivalence is lacking. This study examined the clarity of item phrasing (Study 1) and measurement invariance (Study 2) in university students from Argentina, Spain, and Peru. Two studies were conducted: one to assess perceived item clarity (n = 70) and ...
In:
Acta Psychologica
256 (2025), 104993
| César Merino-Soto, Sergio Dominguez-Lara, Lucas Marcelo Rodriguez, Guillermo M. Chans, Manuel Marti-Vilar
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Die Studie untersucht anhand von IABBAMF-SOEP-Daten den Einfluss sozialer Kontakte junger Geflüchteter auf ihren Übergang in die berufliche Ausbildung. Ergebnisse zeigen: Häufiger Kontakt zu Deutschen ist mit größeren Übergangschancen signifikant assoziiert, Kontakte zu Herkunftsgruppen scheinen erfolgreiche Übergänge eher zu hemmen.
In:
berufsbildung
79 (2025), 4, 32–35
| Franziska Meyer, Oliver Winkler
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This study investigates the link between childbearing and employment changes of female immigrants and their descendants in three European countries: the UK, France, and Germany. Although childbearing significantly influences female labour force participation, the interrelationship between fertility and employment changes among migrant populations is poorly understood. We use event history models to ...
In:
European Journal of Population
41 (2025), 1, 26
| Júlia Mikolai, Hill Kulu, Isaure Delaporte, Chia Liu
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The Covid-19 pandemic brought unprecedented changes to business ownership in the UK which affects a generation of entrepreneurs and their employees. Nonetheless, the impact remains poorly understood. This is because research on capital accumulation has typically lacked high-quality, individualized, population-level data. We overcome these barriers to examine who benefits from economic crises through ...
In:
Journal of Computational Social Science
8 (2025), 2, 29
| Naomi Muggleton, Charles Rahal, Aaron Reeves
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According to behavioral economics, investors’ decisions are influenced by factors beyond rational reasoning, such as an investor's personality. This paper explores the relationships between personality, using the Big Five personality traits framework, and the willingness to invest in assets that contribute to achieving sustainable development goals (SDGs), more specifically, sustainable finances. ...
In:
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
114 (2025), 102332
| E. Muñoz-Muñoz, E. Crespo-Cebada, A. S. Mirón-Sanguino, C. Díaz-Caro
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Inspired by the literature on social polarisation and residential segregation we draw on a probabilistic approach to pursue the evolution of household location preferences. Using microdata from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) for the period 1984–2020 we demonstrate that structural economic change was accompanied by an increasing preference for residence in compact housing close to urban centres. ...
In:
Papers in Regional Science
104 (2025), 6,
| Uwe Neumann, Christoph M. Schmidt
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Maternal sleep is significantly disrupted in the postpartum period, but changes in paternal sleep are less established. Here, we systematically review and meta-analyze available data on paternal sleep in the first 24months post birth, including self-report and objectively measured sleep outcomes. Scopus, PsycINFO, and PubMed were searched for original research articles published until end August 2024. ...
In:
Sleep Health
11 (2025), 3, 279–292
| Julie S. Nielsen, Emil F. Brunbjerg, Maria Hamann Lorentzen, Annika Andersen, Christine E. Parsons
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Science has long struggled with unsuccessful replications and reproductions, a challenge that raises questions about the robustness and credibility of research findings. One potential contributing factor is selective reporting or nonpublication of certain results based on their direction or strength, leading to publication bias. To better understand its extent and risk factors, we examined 178 successful ...
OSF Preprints:
2025,
| Désirée Nießen, Caroline Poppa, Jessica Daikeler, Henning Silber, Bernd Weiß, David Richter
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We examine how labor market disruptions following childbirth relate to intra-household consumption inequality in the long run. Novel survey data from Germany shows that women less educated than their partners are more likely to report child-related career interruptions and receive a smaller share of household consumption, relative to women more educated than their spouses. Moreover, conditioning on ...
In:
Economics Letters
257 (2025), 112650
| Paula Calvo, Ilse Lindenlaub, Lindsey Uniat
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The empirical literature on the relationship between age and well-being is characterised by an unusually persistent series of disagreements over data, method, and interpretation. Previous attempts to advance the discussion have involved different scholars’ specific prescriptions, which were often in near total contradiction to other scholars’ attempts to do the same. Instead, we use specification curve ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2025,
(SOEPpapers 1235)
| Kausik Chaudhuri, Alan Piper