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In: Methods in ecology
In: Social development, Band 31, Heft 4, S. 1157-1175
ISSN: 1467-9507
AbstractIn three studies (N = 854), including one pre‐registered study, we examined factors that might influence American parents' decisions to side with owners versus promote prosociality or sharing when thinking about children's property conflicts. We found that parents' thinking about property conflicts was affected by the relationships among the parents and their children. Namely, parents were most likely to side with owners when their child was described as transgressing upon another's property. Conversely, when the parents' child was the owner, they were more likely to encourage sharing. Parents' explanations revealed that their decisions were a reflection of their personal beliefs about the importance of personal rights and/or promoting prosociality. The findings also suggested that some parents were reasoning in nuanced ways about the importance of teaching children about consent and its link to ownership. The findings from these studies have bearing on the potential role of parental input in young children's appreciation of owners' rights. These results suggest that parents may be providing children with some informative input regarding the nature of ownership rights such as when they matter most.
In: Journal of marine engineering & technology, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 68-77
ISSN: 2056-8487
In: Encyclopedias of the Natural World 4
This major reference is an overview of the current state of theoretical ecology through a series of topical entries centered on both ecological and statistical themes. Coverage ranges across scales—from the physiological, to populations, landscapes, and ecosystems. Entries provide an introduction to broad fields such as Applied Ecology, Behavioral Ecology, Computational Ecology, Ecosystem Ecology, Epidemiology and Epidemic Modeling, Population Ecology, Spatial Ecology and Statistics in Ecology. Others provide greater specificity and depth, including discussions on the Allee effect, ordinary differential equations, and ecosystem services. Descriptions of modern statistical and modeling approaches and how they contributed to advances in theoretical ecology are also included. Succinct, uncompromising, and authoritative—a "must have" for those interested in the use of theory in the ecological sciences