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Population research --- Population --- Periodicals. --- Recherche --- Périodiques --- Mexico (Mexico : State) --- Mexico (Mexique : Etat) --- Economic history. --- Population. --- Population research. --- Social conditions --- Since 1970 --- Mexico --- Latin America --- Latin America. --- Mexico. --- Economic conditions --- Business, Economy and Management --- Social Sciences --- Economics --- Demographic Studies --- Regional and International Studies --- Sociology --- Demography --- Migration --- Sociodemographic --- Population Policy --- Population Studies --- Human population --- Human populations --- Population growth --- Populations, Human --- History, Economic --- Research --- Estados Unidos Mexicanos --- Méjico --- Meḳsiḳe --- Meksiko --- Meksyk --- Messico --- Mexique --- República Mexicana --- Stany Zjednoczone Meksyku --- United Mexican States --- United States of Mexico --- Asociación Latinoamericana de Libre Comercio countries --- Neotropical region --- Neotropics --- New World tropics --- Spanish America --- Departamento de México (Mexico) --- EDOMEX (Mexico) --- Estado de México (Mexico) --- Gobierno del Estado de México (Mexico) --- Intendencia de México (Mexico) --- Mexico (Mexico : Department) --- Mexico (Mexico : Intendancy) --- Mexico (Mexico : Province) --- Provincia de México (Mexico) --- Mexique (Country) --- Anáhuac --- メキシコ --- Mekishiko --- מקסיקו --- Human ecology --- Malthusianism --- Maxico --- demography --- migration --- sociodemographic --- population policy --- population studies --- Social conditions.
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This open access book addresses the future of work and industry by 2040—a core interest for many disciplines inspiring a strong momentum for employment and training within the industrial world. The future of industrial safety in terms of technological risk-management, although of obvious concern to international actors in various industries, has been quite sparsely addressed. This brief reflects the viewpoints of experts who come from different academic disciplines and various sectors such as oil and gas, energy, transportation, and the digital and even the military worlds, as expressed in debates and discussions during a two-day international seminar. The contributors address such questions as: What influence will ageing and lack of digital skills in the workforce of the occidental world have on safety culture? What are the likely impacts of big data, artificial intelligence and autonomous technologies on decision-making, and on the roles and responsibilities of individual actors and whole organizations? What role have human beings in a world of accelerating changes? What effects will societal concerns and the entrance of new players have on technological risk management and governance? Managing Future Challenges for Safety will interest and influence researchers considering the future effects of a number of currently developing technologies and their practitioner counterparts working in industry and regulation.
Financial risk management. --- Industrial organization. --- Economic sociology. --- Personnel management. --- Cognitive psychology. --- Risk Management. --- Industrial Organization. --- Economic Sociology. --- Human Resource Management. --- Cognitive Psychology. --- Psychology, Cognitive --- Cognitive science --- Psychology --- Corporations --- Employment management --- Human resource management --- Human resources management --- Manpower utilization --- Personnel administration --- Management --- Public administration --- Employees --- Employment practices liability insurance --- Supervision of employees --- Economic sociology --- Economics --- Socio-economics --- Socioeconomics --- Sociology of economics --- Sociology --- Industries --- Organization --- Industrial concentration --- Industrial management --- Industrial sociology --- Risk management --- Personnel management --- Social aspects --- Industrial Safety --- Future of Hazardous Industries --- Sociodemographic Trends --- Human and Organisational Factors --- Safety Models
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Food is a source of nutrients but it also provides basic pleasure and aesthetic experiences. Acceptance, food choice, and consumption are affected by many factors, including both intrinsic and extrinsic factors and cues, as well as consumer characteristics. Food-elicited emotions are becoming a critical component in designing products that meet consumers’ needs and expectations. Several studies have reported on the presence of emotional responses to food and the relationships of these to product acceptability, preference, and choice. This Special Issue brings together a small range of studies with a diversity of approaches that provide good examples of the complex and multidisciplinary nature of this subject matter.
History of engineering & technology --- food values --- positive anticipated emotions --- attitude toward the brand --- attitude toward eating a hamburger --- purchase intention --- maize tortilla --- consumer behavior --- sensory profile --- texture --- physico-chemical parameters --- alcohol --- impulsivity --- emotional intelligence --- sensation seeking --- Italian consumers --- food attitudes --- psychological trait --- sociodemographic variables --- ethnic food --- consumer perception --- emotion --- purchase intent --- salads --- visual cues --- consumer behaviour --- wine attribute --- sherry wine --- gender --- food safety --- take-away food --- online public opinion --- emotional analysis --- topic analysis --- natural language processing --- food-evoked emotions --- sensory liking --- consumer acceptance --- food choice --- food intake and consumption
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The early days of tourism development had a naïve vision of tourism’s impacts on society in terms of economic, social, and environmental benefits. Time has passed, and we have learnt lessons regarding the success and failure of tourism development. Mass tourism development has pros and cons and is not necessarily the optimal development model. Alternative development strategies should be contemplated. This Special Issue deals with different topics concerning optimal tourism development. Destination management requires further understanding of different issues, such as carrying capacity, income-based optimal supply size, identification and development of optimal market niches, and adaptation or environmental protection strategies. Tourism planning is concerned with the role of economies of agglomeration, i.e., the advantages of spatial clusters vs scattered development. Additionally, support for and investment in innovation, accessibility, and mobility are relevant nowadays. From the stakeholders’ perspective, it is relevant to discuss ways of cooperating and sources of conflicts among different sectors and actors, governance and incentives for sustainable tourism practices, and equity and economic distribution of benefits. Finally, the development of methodological tools for the assessment of optimal tourism development is necessary for policy making, in particular the development of methods that are capable of integrating economic, environmental, and social criteria.
corporate social responsibility --- economic --- environmental and social responsibility --- Internet --- hotel services --- Spain --- healthy architecture --- construction materials --- environment --- radon --- underground building --- heritage building --- real-estate market --- tourist housing --- territorial sustainability --- sustainable tourism --- multicriteria assessment --- geographical information systems --- sustainable destination --- destination image --- marketing strategies --- communication --- segmentation --- rural development --- National Parks --- nature tourism --- public use --- inbound tourism --- China --- air pollution --- PM2.5 --- gravity model --- spatial statistics --- spatial clusters --- Moran’s I --- Getis–Ord G (d) --- LISA --- Extremadura --- tourist recycling behaviour --- environmental barriers --- sociodemographic --- situational --- tourism --- spatial analyses --- cluster analysis --- Ward’s method --- EU --- product innovation model --- transformative tourism experience --- development process design --- core resource identification --- tourism product development
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Food is a source of nutrients but it also provides basic pleasure and aesthetic experiences. Acceptance, food choice, and consumption are affected by many factors, including both intrinsic and extrinsic factors and cues, as well as consumer characteristics. Food-elicited emotions are becoming a critical component in designing products that meet consumers’ needs and expectations. Several studies have reported on the presence of emotional responses to food and the relationships of these to product acceptability, preference, and choice. This Special Issue brings together a small range of studies with a diversity of approaches that provide good examples of the complex and multidisciplinary nature of this subject matter.
food values --- positive anticipated emotions --- attitude toward the brand --- attitude toward eating a hamburger --- purchase intention --- maize tortilla --- consumer behavior --- sensory profile --- texture --- physico-chemical parameters --- alcohol --- impulsivity --- emotional intelligence --- sensation seeking --- Italian consumers --- food attitudes --- psychological trait --- sociodemographic variables --- ethnic food --- consumer perception --- emotion --- purchase intent --- salads --- visual cues --- consumer behaviour --- wine attribute --- sherry wine --- gender --- food safety --- take-away food --- online public opinion --- emotional analysis --- topic analysis --- natural language processing --- food-evoked emotions --- sensory liking --- consumer acceptance --- food choice --- food intake and consumption
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Nutritional epidemiology examines dietary or nutritional factors in relation to the occurrence of disease in various populations. It is a fact that substantial progress has been made in recent years in nutritional epidemiology. Compared to the practice during the 1990s, and with the improvements in data analytics, several new approaches are gaining ground. Results from a variety of large-scale studies in the field of nutrition epidemiology have substantially contributed toward the evidence used in guiding dietary recommendations for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases, metabolic disorders, some types of cancer, and other morbidities. In this Special Issue, we would like to bring readers closer to the state-of-the-art in the field by gathering papers covering different aspects of nutrition epidemiology from population-based observational studies. Topics of the submitted articles may, but not necessarily, include eating habits of various populations, especially of those not well-studied, such as in Africa, Oceania, South Americas, immigrants, minorities, as well as a variety of associations between nutrients/foods/food patterns and chronic diseases, like cardiovascular, diabetes, obesity, cancer, etc., and gene–nutrient and epigenome–nutrient interactions related to human health at all ages.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- Food & society --- healthy diet indexes --- food intake --- apulia --- mind index --- dash index --- med-diet score --- dietary patterns --- eating restrictions --- food involvement --- adults --- obesity --- nutrition assessment --- diet survey --- dietary pattern analysis --- nutrient inadequacy --- overweight and obesity --- nutritional epidemiology --- nutrition transition --- pastoral nomadism --- Mongolia --- central Asia --- breakfast consumption --- breakfast composition --- children --- dietary intake --- dietary quality --- diet patterns --- cardiometabolic outcomes --- adiposity --- short-chain fatty acids --- BMI --- waist-to-height ratio --- fiber --- gut metagenome --- diet --- plant sterols --- stanols --- omega-3 fatty acids --- familial hypercholesterolemia --- nutritional status --- population survey --- oral frailty --- health behavior --- eating competence --- health outcomes --- validation --- questionnaire --- food consumption --- salty snack products --- students --- consumption --- salt intake --- health policies --- nutrition policies --- Europe --- primary care --- breakfast intake --- lifestyle behaviors --- sociodemographic factors --- healthy diet indexes --- food intake --- apulia --- mind index --- dash index --- med-diet score --- dietary patterns --- eating restrictions --- food involvement --- adults --- obesity --- nutrition assessment --- diet survey --- dietary pattern analysis --- nutrient inadequacy --- overweight and obesity --- nutritional epidemiology --- nutrition transition --- pastoral nomadism --- Mongolia --- central Asia --- breakfast consumption --- breakfast composition --- children --- dietary intake --- dietary quality --- diet patterns --- cardiometabolic outcomes --- adiposity --- short-chain fatty acids --- BMI --- waist-to-height ratio --- fiber --- gut metagenome --- diet --- plant sterols --- stanols --- omega-3 fatty acids --- familial hypercholesterolemia --- nutritional status --- population survey --- oral frailty --- health behavior --- eating competence --- health outcomes --- validation --- questionnaire --- food consumption --- salty snack products --- students --- consumption --- salt intake --- health policies --- nutrition policies --- Europe --- primary care --- breakfast intake --- lifestyle behaviors --- sociodemographic factors
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Food is a source of nutrients but it also provides basic pleasure and aesthetic experiences. Acceptance, food choice, and consumption are affected by many factors, including both intrinsic and extrinsic factors and cues, as well as consumer characteristics. Food-elicited emotions are becoming a critical component in designing products that meet consumers’ needs and expectations. Several studies have reported on the presence of emotional responses to food and the relationships of these to product acceptability, preference, and choice. This Special Issue brings together a small range of studies with a diversity of approaches that provide good examples of the complex and multidisciplinary nature of this subject matter.
History of engineering & technology --- food values --- positive anticipated emotions --- attitude toward the brand --- attitude toward eating a hamburger --- purchase intention --- maize tortilla --- consumer behavior --- sensory profile --- texture --- physico-chemical parameters --- alcohol --- impulsivity --- emotional intelligence --- sensation seeking --- Italian consumers --- food attitudes --- psychological trait --- sociodemographic variables --- ethnic food --- consumer perception --- emotion --- purchase intent --- salads --- visual cues --- consumer behaviour --- wine attribute --- sherry wine --- gender --- food safety --- take-away food --- online public opinion --- emotional analysis --- topic analysis --- natural language processing --- food-evoked emotions --- sensory liking --- consumer acceptance --- food choice --- food intake and consumption --- food values --- positive anticipated emotions --- attitude toward the brand --- attitude toward eating a hamburger --- purchase intention --- maize tortilla --- consumer behavior --- sensory profile --- texture --- physico-chemical parameters --- alcohol --- impulsivity --- emotional intelligence --- sensation seeking --- Italian consumers --- food attitudes --- psychological trait --- sociodemographic variables --- ethnic food --- consumer perception --- emotion --- purchase intent --- salads --- visual cues --- consumer behaviour --- wine attribute --- sherry wine --- gender --- food safety --- take-away food --- online public opinion --- emotional analysis --- topic analysis --- natural language processing --- food-evoked emotions --- sensory liking --- consumer acceptance --- food choice --- food intake and consumption
Choose an application
The early days of tourism development had a naïve vision of tourism’s impacts on society in terms of economic, social, and environmental benefits. Time has passed, and we have learnt lessons regarding the success and failure of tourism development. Mass tourism development has pros and cons and is not necessarily the optimal development model. Alternative development strategies should be contemplated. This Special Issue deals with different topics concerning optimal tourism development. Destination management requires further understanding of different issues, such as carrying capacity, income-based optimal supply size, identification and development of optimal market niches, and adaptation or environmental protection strategies. Tourism planning is concerned with the role of economies of agglomeration, i.e., the advantages of spatial clusters vs scattered development. Additionally, support for and investment in innovation, accessibility, and mobility are relevant nowadays. From the stakeholders’ perspective, it is relevant to discuss ways of cooperating and sources of conflicts among different sectors and actors, governance and incentives for sustainable tourism practices, and equity and economic distribution of benefits. Finally, the development of methodological tools for the assessment of optimal tourism development is necessary for policy making, in particular the development of methods that are capable of integrating economic, environmental, and social criteria.
Economics, finance, business & management --- corporate social responsibility --- economic --- environmental and social responsibility --- Internet --- hotel services --- Spain --- healthy architecture --- construction materials --- environment --- radon --- underground building --- heritage building --- real-estate market --- tourist housing --- territorial sustainability --- sustainable tourism --- multicriteria assessment --- geographical information systems --- sustainable destination --- destination image --- marketing strategies --- communication --- segmentation --- rural development --- National Parks --- nature tourism --- public use --- inbound tourism --- China --- air pollution --- PM2.5 --- gravity model --- spatial statistics --- spatial clusters --- Moran’s I --- Getis–Ord G (d) --- LISA --- Extremadura --- tourist recycling behaviour --- environmental barriers --- sociodemographic --- situational --- tourism --- spatial analyses --- cluster analysis --- Ward’s method --- EU --- product innovation model --- transformative tourism experience --- development process design --- core resource identification --- tourism product development --- corporate social responsibility --- economic --- environmental and social responsibility --- Internet --- hotel services --- Spain --- healthy architecture --- construction materials --- environment --- radon --- underground building --- heritage building --- real-estate market --- tourist housing --- territorial sustainability --- sustainable tourism --- multicriteria assessment --- geographical information systems --- sustainable destination --- destination image --- marketing strategies --- communication --- segmentation --- rural development --- National Parks --- nature tourism --- public use --- inbound tourism --- China --- air pollution --- PM2.5 --- gravity model --- spatial statistics --- spatial clusters --- Moran’s I --- Getis–Ord G (d) --- LISA --- Extremadura --- tourist recycling behaviour --- environmental barriers --- sociodemographic --- situational --- tourism --- spatial analyses --- cluster analysis --- Ward’s method --- EU --- product innovation model --- transformative tourism experience --- development process design --- core resource identification --- tourism product development
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Sustainable interdisciplinarity focuses on human–nature relations and a multitude of contemporary overlapping research between society and the environment. A variety of disciplines have played a large part in better understanding sustainable development since its high-profile emergence approximately a quarter of a century ago. At present, the forefront of sustainability research is an array of methods, techniques, and growing knowledge base that considers past, present, and future pathways. Specific multidisciplinary concentrations within the scope of societal changes, urban landscape transformations, international environmental comparative studies, as well as key theories and dynamics relating to sustainable performance are explored. Specializations in complex sustainability issues address international governance arrangements, rules, and organizations—both public and private—within the scope of four themes: sustainability, human geography, environment, and interdisciplinary societal studies. This book contains eleven thoroughly refereed contributions concerning pressing issues that interlink sustainable interdisciplinarity with the presented themes in terms of the human–nature interface.
bike-share --- sustainable tourism and hospitality --- Cambodia --- interdisciplinary societal studies --- Fujian Province --- ecotourism --- spatial analysis --- urban spatial variables --- urban climate zones --- restoration --- interior components --- determinants --- Cheonggye Stream --- elderly people --- sustainability --- ridership --- Suseongdong Valley --- GIS --- collective forest --- concept of landscape --- community livelihood --- evidence-based design --- network analysis --- sustainable architectural design --- sociodemographic determinants --- human geography --- sustainable interior design --- participation --- income --- politics --- mathematical climate simulation modeling --- environmental contextualization --- community forest --- ideology --- air temperature --- Alzheimer --- dementia-friendly cities --- spatial statistical analysis --- sustainable water management --- adaptive reuse --- China --- healing gardens --- age-sensitive landscape design --- SES framework --- recycling --- bicycle-sharing systems --- GM food --- Korean culture --- urban climate --- sustainable tourism --- stakeholder collaboration --- food safety --- economics --- Czech Republic --- environment --- policy making --- performance --- culture --- regression --- nature reserve --- urban planning and design --- healthy public space design
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Nutritional epidemiology examines dietary or nutritional factors in relation to the occurrence of disease in various populations. It is a fact that substantial progress has been made in recent years in nutritional epidemiology. Compared to the practice during the 1990s, and with the improvements in data analytics, several new approaches are gaining ground. Results from a variety of large-scale studies in the field of nutrition epidemiology have substantially contributed toward the evidence used in guiding dietary recommendations for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases, metabolic disorders, some types of cancer, and other morbidities. In this Special Issue, we would like to bring readers closer to the state-of-the-art in the field by gathering papers covering different aspects of nutrition epidemiology from population-based observational studies. Topics of the submitted articles may, but not necessarily, include eating habits of various populations, especially of those not well-studied, such as in Africa, Oceania, South Americas, immigrants, minorities, as well as a variety of associations between nutrients/foods/food patterns and chronic diseases, like cardiovascular, diabetes, obesity, cancer, etc., and gene–nutrient and epigenome–nutrient interactions related to human health at all ages.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- Food & society --- healthy diet indexes --- food intake --- apulia --- mind index --- dash index --- med-diet score --- dietary patterns --- eating restrictions --- food involvement --- adults --- obesity --- nutrition assessment --- diet survey --- dietary pattern analysis --- nutrient inadequacy --- overweight and obesity --- nutritional epidemiology --- nutrition transition --- pastoral nomadism --- Mongolia --- central Asia --- breakfast consumption --- breakfast composition --- children --- dietary intake --- dietary quality --- diet patterns --- cardiometabolic outcomes --- adiposity --- short-chain fatty acids --- BMI --- waist-to-height ratio --- fiber --- gut metagenome --- diet --- plant sterols --- stanols --- omega-3 fatty acids --- familial hypercholesterolemia --- nutritional status --- population survey --- oral frailty --- health behavior --- eating competence --- health outcomes --- validation --- questionnaire --- food consumption --- salty snack products --- students --- consumption --- salt intake --- health policies --- nutrition policies --- Europe --- primary care --- breakfast intake --- lifestyle behaviors --- sociodemographic factors
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