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· 2005
Focusing on the period from the late 19th century to the demise of the Habsburg Empire, this study analyses political relations between the crown-land of Galicia and the imperial capital, Vienna. The book is divided into four parts, the focus of which is provided by an examination of the lives and activities of the deputies from Galicia to the Austrian parliament. The author investigates their collective biographies, and their integration into organized politics through political parties, parliamentary fractions and electoral committees. Special attention is devoted to the question as to how the shift from a traditional political society to a system of mass politics took place, in what was - comparatively speaking - a "backward" region. Besides analyzing these changing structures along the lines of the main national communities in Galicia (Poles, Ruthenians / Ukrainians, Jews), the author also seeks to identify the common conditions influencing all collective political action as well as the diverse forms of correlation and interaction between the national communities. All this is evidenced in the shaping of modern political organisations, the dynamic emergence of an age of mass media, the development of a specific regional political culture and at the symbolic level of self-representation.
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Abstract: In order to investigate employees' needs of the Medical Faculty of the University of Freiburg regarding research data management, the BE-KONFORM study was performed in a two-step approach. First, guideline-based qualitative video interviews with four researchers were performed to identify key constructs of relevance. Second, a standardized online survey was conducted from 1st to 15th of November 2020 based on e-mail invitation by the dean and a faculty newsletter. The questionnaire was provided bilingual (English and German) using a backward-forward translation method, no reminders and incentives were used to increase the response rate. The online survey was programmed in REDCap and was accessible via online link. The target population were members of the Medical Faculty (listed in the newsletter mailing list) regardless of the type of working contract signed. The final dataset contains 236 complete cases (90% German and 10% English). The study includes a randomised module asking for data publication (group A) or not (group B). 113 cases were randomized into group A and 99% of them consented to the publication of the collected research data in anonymized form (n=112). The dataset comprised questions about work-related characteristics (professional status, working experience, scientific field of work), data management-related items (definition of research data management, type of data used, type of storage used for saving data, use of electronic laboratory notebooks), experience and attitudes towards data publication in data repositories, as well as needs and preferences regarding research data management support. The produced data offers the possibility to connect with other data collected in this field in other contexts (faculties or universities)
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· 2023
Abstract: Background Stress-related disorders such as anxiety and depression are highly prevalent and cause a tremendous burden for affected individuals and society. In order to improve prevention strategies, knowledge regarding resilience mechanisms and ways to boost them is highly needed. In the Dynamic Modelling of Resilience - interventional multicenter study (DynaM-INT), we will conduct a large-scale feasibility and preliminary efficacy test for two mobile- and wearable-based just-in-time adaptive interventions (JITAIs), designed to target putative resilience mechanisms. Deep participant phenotyping at baseline serves to identify individual predictors for intervention success in terms of target engagement and stress resilience. Methods DynaM-INT aims to recruit N = 250 healthy but vulnerable young adults in the transition phase between adolescence and adulthood (18-27 years) across five research sites (Berlin, Mainz, Nijmegen, Tel Aviv, and Warsaw). Participants are included if they report at least three negative burdensome past life events and show increased levels of internalizing symptoms while not being affected by any major mental disorder. Participants are characterized in a multimodal baseline phase, which includes neuropsychological tests, neuroimaging, bio-samples, sociodemographic and psychological questionnaires, a video-recorded interview, as well as ecological momentary assessments (EMA) and ecological physiological assessments (EPA). Subsequently, participants are randomly assigned to one of two ecological momentary interventions (EMIs), targeting either positive cognitive reappraisal or reward sensitivity. During the following intervention phase, participants' stress responses are tracked using EMA and EPA, and JITAIs are triggered if an individually calibrated stress threshold is crossed. In a three-month-long follow-up phase, parts of the baseline characterization phase are repeated. Throughout the entire study, stressor exposure and mental health are regularly monitored to calculate stressor reactivity as a proxy for outcome resilience. The online monitoring questionnaires and the repetition of the baseline questionnaires also serve to assess target engagement. Discussion The DynaM-INT study intends to advance the field of resilience research by feasibility-testing two new mechanistically targeted JITAIs that aim at increasing individual stress resilience and identifying predictors for successful intervention response. Determining these predictors is an important step toward future randomized controlled trials to establish the efficacy of these interventions
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