7 resultados para identity processes

em Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad del País Vasco


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Published as article in: Journal of Economic Methodology, 2010, vol. 17, issue 3, pages 261-275.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

[Es] La complejidad social de los países desarrollados, junto a la peculiaridad de los factores socioculturales de cada país y el protagonismo del sujeto en su propio desarrollo, están condicionando las diferentes trayectorias en el paso de la adolescencia a la edad adulta. La investigación que se presenta tiene por objeto profundizar en la autopercepción de la identidad personal y describir los procesos psicológicos que favorecen la madurez psicológica y la autonomía personal a pesar de mantener relaciones y estados de dependencia familiar y económica. Se han encuestado a un total de 231 varones y mujeres, de edades comprendidas entre los 19 y los 30 años de edad, para saber cómo se definen en relación con su identidad personal y cuáles son las razones que les lleva a tal percepción. Los resultados demuestran que hay hasta cuatro identidades diferenciadas en la década de los 20 a los 30 años, basadas en un proceso subjetivo del desarrollo del yo individual orientado hacia la madurez psicológica, más que en otros acontecimientos sociales más o menos normativos.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In this work the state of the art of the automatic dialogue strategy management using Markov decision processes (MDP) with reinforcement learning (RL) is described. Partially observable Markov decision processes (POMDP) are also described. To test the validity of these methods, two spoken dialogue systems have been developed. The first one is a spoken dialogue system for weather forecast providing, and the second one is a more complex system for train information. With the first system, comparisons between a rule-based system and an automatically trained system have been done, using a real corpus to train the automatic strategy. In the second system, the scalability of these methods when used in larger systems has been tested.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The loss of species is known to have significant effects on ecosystem functioning, but only recently has it been recognized that species loss might rival the effects of other forms of environmental change on ecosystem processes. There is a need for experimental studies that explicitly manipulate species richness and environmental factors concurrently to determine their relative impacts on key ecosystem processes such as plant litter decomposition. It is crucial to understand what factors affect the rate of plant litter decomposition and the relative magnitude of such effects because the rate at which plant litter is lost and transformed to other forms of organic and inorganic carbon determines the capacity for carbon storage in ecosystems and the rate at which greenhouse gasses such as carbon dioxide are outgassed. Here we compared how an increase in water temperature of 5 degrees C and loss of detritivorous invertebrate and plant litter species affect decomposition rates in a laboratory experiment simulating stream conditions. Like some prior studies, we found that species identity, rather than species richness per se, is a key driver of decomposition, but additionally we showed that the loss of particular species can equal or exceed temperature change in its impact on decomposition. Our results indicate that the loss of particular species can be as important a driver of decomposition as substantial temperature change, but also that predicting the relative consequences of species loss and other forms of environmental change on decomposition requires knowledge of assemblages and their constituent species' ecology and ecophysiology.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In recent years, participatory approaches have been incorporated in decision-making processes as a way to strengthen the bonds between diverse areas of knowledge and social actors in natural resources management and environmental governance. Despite the favourable context, this paradigm shift is still in an early stage within the development of the Natura 2000 in the European Union, the largest network of protected areas in the world. To enhance the full scope of participatory approaches in this context, this article: (i) briefly reviews the role of participatory approaches in environmental governance, (ii) develops a common framework to evaluate such participatory processes in protected area management, (iii) applies this framework to a real case study, and (iv) based on the lessons learned, provides guidance to improve the future governance of Natura 2000 sites.