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Bochum:
Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft,
1995,
(Diskussionspapier Nr. 95-09)
| Stefan Sandbrink, Gert G. Wagner
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Abstract Previous research found that cognitive training increases the Big Five personality trait Openness to Experience during and some weeks after the intervention. The present study investigated whether long-term changes happen in Openness to Experience and other personality traits after an extensive cognitive training of memory and perceptual speed. The intervention group consisted of 204 adults ...
In:
Journal of Personality
85 (2017), 4, 454-463
| Julia Sander, Florian Schmiedek, Annette Brose, Gert G. Wagner, Jule Specht
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Frequent social interactions are strongly linked to positive affect, longevity, and good health. Although there has been extensive research on changes in the size of social networks over time, little attention has been given to the development of contact frequency across the life span. In this cohort-sequential longitudinal study, we examined intraindividual changes in the frequency of social contact ...
In:
Developmental Psychology
53 (2017), 8, 1571-1588
| Julia Sander, Jürgen Schupp, David Richter
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Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2007,
(SOEPpapers 60)
| Monika Sander
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Both health and income inequalities have been shown to be much greater in Britain than in Germany. One of the main reasons seems to be the difference in the relative position of the retired, who, in Britain, are much more concentrated in the lower income groups. Inequality analysis reveals that while the distribution of health shocks is more concentrated among those on low incomes in Britain, early ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2008,
(SOEPpapers 188)
| Jennifer Roberts, Nigel Rice, Andrew M. Jones
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This study attempts to understand the effect of health on the decision of older workers to leave the labour market – a decision which is made within the context of the pension and benefit systems of the UK and Germany. The authors found that health is an extremely important factor in the retirement decision for both men and women in the UK and Germany. The effects of poor health seem to be greater ...
London:
Anglo-German Foundation,
2006,
(Final Report to the Anglo-German Foundation)
| Jennifer Roberts, Nigel Rice, Martin Schellhorn, Andrew Jones, Lynn Maria Gambin
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Immigrants in Germany exhibit, on average, an increased frequency of unemployment, reduced earnings, and an increased uptake and dependence upon welfare and unemployment benefits relative to native Germans. Although Germany's strong welfare state has shown success in mobilizing the difficult-to-employ in general, it has scarcely focused or targeted its efforts on immigrants despite their prevalence ...
2011,
| Eric Robinson
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How do people decide how happy they are? In principle, a number of models are possible and the current chapter highlights three of them. People could subdivide their life into various domains, consider their progress in these domains, and then integrate the results of this bottom-up activity. Alternatively, people could omit such a systematic process and simply base their judgments on whatever information ...
In:
| Michael Robinson, Robert Klein
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2014,
| Johannes Rode
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Heidelberg:
Institut für interdisziplinäre Forschung (FEST) Heidelberg,
2016,
(Studie des Instituts für interdisziplinäre Forschung (FEST) Heidelberg)
| Dorothee Rodenhäuser, Benjamin Held, Hans Diefenbacher