-
In:
Weekly Report
4 (2008), 2, 8-13
| Claudia Diehl, Steffen Mau, Jürgen Schupp
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2005,
| Claudia Diehl, Rainer Schnell
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In:
International Migration Review
40 (2006), 4, 786-816
| Claudia Diehl, Rainer Schnell
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The study investigates psychosexual and family outcomes among German long-term survivors of adolescent cancer. Survivors of cancer during adolescence (n=820; age at onset of disease: M=15.8 years, SD=0.9, age at follow-up: M=30.4, SD=6.0 years) completed questionnaires on their family life and their psychosexual and autonomy development. Outcomes were compared to an age-matched sample (German Socio-Economic ...
In:
Psycho-Oncology
19 (2010), 12, 1277-1284
| Ute Dieluweit, Klaus-Michael Debastin, Desiree Grabow, Peter Kaatsch, Richard Peter, Diana C. M. Seitz
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Adolescence involves graduating from school and preparing one's professional career. The accomplishment of these tasks may be hampered by the experience of cancer. This study investigates the educational and professional achievements of German long-term survivors of adolescent cancer. Adult survivors of cancer during adolescence (n=820, age at onset between 15 and 18 years; M=15.8, SD=0.9 years; ...
In:
Pediatric Blood & Cancer
56 (2011), 3, 432-438
| Ute Dieluweit, Klaus-Michael Debatin, Desiree Grabow, Peter Kaatsch, Richard Peter, Diana C. M. Seitz, Lutz Goldbeck
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According to the hedonic treadmill model, good and bad events temporarily affect happiness, but people quickly adapt back to hedonic neutrality. The theory, which has gained widespread acceptance in recent years, implies that individual and societal efforts to increase happiness are doomed to failure. The recent empirical work outlined here indicates that 5 important revisions to the treadmill model ...
In:
American Psychologist
61 (2006), 4, 305-314
| Ed Diener, Richard E. Lucas, Christie Napa Scollon
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Previous research has shown that social households have a higher probability of owning risky assets. Using a representative sample of the German population, we demonstrate that the sociability effect is much stronger among people younger than 50.
In:
Economics Letters
113 (2011), 1, 62-64
| Maik Dierkes, Alexander Klos, Thomas Langer
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In the following we aim to approach the question of why, in most domains of professional and economic life, women are more vulnerable than men to becoming targets of prejudice and discrimination by proposing that one important cause of this inequality is the presence of gender stereotypes in many domains of society. We describe two approaches employed to measure gender stereotypes: An explicit questionnaire ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 558)
| Julia Dietrich, Konrad Schnabel, Tuulia Ortner, Alice Eagly, Rocio Garcia-Retamero, Lea Kröger, Elke Holst
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In:
Leo Lucassen, David Feldman, Jochen Oltmer ,
Paths to Integration. Migrants in Western Europe (1880-2004)
Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press
116-136
| Barbara Dietz
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This paper analyzes the effect of educational mismatch on wages in Germany, using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel. Educational mismatch has been discussed extensively, mostly by applying OLS wage regressions which are prone to an unobserved heterogeneity bias. This problem is approached by using FE and IV models. As a stability check, the regressions are rerun using data from the International ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 565)
| Verena Dill