Showing 161 - 180 results of 13,544 for search '(( significantly ((weaker decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ) OR ( significant increased trust ))', query time: 0.72s Refine Results
  1. 161

    Experiment 1 data. by Matthew Chennells (13905669)

    Published 2022
    “…In addition, altruism rates are significantly decreasing with increases in the level of temptation of the alternative option.…”
  2. 162

    Parental alleles associated with increased/decreased trait values and significant mean differences observed in the RILs<sup>1</sup> for phenotypic trait values when a particular parental allele is present at major QTL identified in this study. by Ajay Kumar (192967)

    Published 2019
    “…<p>Parental alleles associated with increased/decreased trait values and significant mean differences observed in the RILs<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0221826#t003fn001" target="_blank"><sup>1</sup></a> for phenotypic trait values when a particular parental allele is present at major QTL identified in this study.…”
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    Standardized path coefficients and significance. by Haiying Lin (3623720)

    Published 2024
    “…The findings are as follows: (1) E-commerce participation significantly promotes farmer entrepreneurial behavior; (2) E-commerce participation as a mediating variable has a positive indirect effect on the relationship between social trust, network infrastructure, human capital, and farmer entrepreneurial behavior; (3) E-commerce participation has a significant positive influence on farmer entrepreneurship in the agricultural sector, and farmers with higher levels of network infrastructure and human capital have a higher probability of choosing agricultural entrepreneurship under the influence of e-commerce participation. …”
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    Table_1_Should Trust Be Stressed? General Trust and Proactive Coping as Buffers to Perceived Stress.xlsx by Anders Carlander (8951030)

    Published 2020
    “…<p>Stress is becoming an increasingly important public health concern. Assuming that individual levels of trust and coping can buffer psychological stress, we explore validated measures of general trust [General Trust Scale (GTS)], proactive coping [Proactive Coping Inventory (PCI)], jointly with personality [Honesty-Humility, Emotionality, Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, and Openness to experience (HEXACO)], and intolerance of uncertainty (IUS), as predictors of perceived stress [Perceived Stress Scale (PSS)]. …”
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