Browse Titles - 148 results

Sort

Are Conflicts in the 21st Century Mainly Identity-based?
See details
(Latest Thinking, 2017), 17 mins
The 20th Century has been marked by a return to ethnic and religious affiliations and identifications which continue to be in the foreground of political discourse. The rise of religious groups is represented by the media as a turbulent phenomenon, which spikes new conflicts globally. These representations of coll...
Open Access
(Latest Thinking, 2017), 17 mins
×
Are Europeans Today Genetically Different from Their Ancestors?
See details
presented by Johannes Krause, 1980- (Latest Thinking, 2017), 15 mins
Different ethnic groups have shaped the genetic makeup of today’s Europeans. Through migration from various regions of the world, the genetic material of humans who first arrived in Europe forty thousand years ago has seen drastic changes over the last ten thousand years. By analyzing D.N.A extracted from ancien...
Open Access
presented by Johannes Krause, 1980- (Latest Thinking, 2017), 15 mins
×
Are There Different Types of Beauty?
See details
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2019), 10 mins
Are there different types of beauty? In this video, WINFRIED MENNINGHAUS investigates the meanings of and values inherent in four categories of subject appeal, namely beauty, elegance, grace, and sexiness. Adopting a bottom-up approach which foregrounds individual beliefs over theoretical assumptions, Menninghaus...
Open Access
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2019), 10 mins
×
Are There Forms of Media Representation of Extreme Crises that Avoid Commodification and Spectacle?
See details
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2017), 10 mins
In the face of extreme crises, such as natural disasters or national catastrophes, media representation frequently tends to be voyeuristic and to transform these events into spectacles. Considering this tendency, CHRISTIANE BROSIUS investigated whether there are forms of representation that allow to be close to pe...
Open Access
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2017), 10 mins
×
Can a Single Model Explain Different Functions of the Human Brain?
See details
(Germany: Latest Thinking, 2018), 8 mins
The human brain has many functions; for instance, it allows people to focus on particular objects and ignore others, or to remember events in the past. TATJANA TCHUMATCHENKO uses mathematical equations in order to understand how our brain achieves this. Previous research in this area has developed models that expl...
Open Access
(Germany: Latest Thinking, 2018), 8 mins
×
Can Moral Suasion Effectively Induce Compliance with the Law?
See details
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking), 9 mins
In the large-scale natural field experiment presented in this video different treatments to induce compliance with the law were tested: Potential evaders of TV license fees in Austria received different mailings – one presenting the prospects of financial and legal consequences, one appealing to morals and one c...
Open Access
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking), 9 mins
×
Can Multiple Platforms Profitably Co-Exist in Digital Markets?
See details
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2018), 12 mins
In the internet age, digital platforms are providing increasingly important settings for buyers and sellers to interact. In this video, MARTIN PEITZ investigates why some markets tend to be dominated by single platforms (e.g. Google for internet search) while others (e.g. hotel booking) allow multiple platforms to...
Open Access
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2018), 12 mins
×
Can Physical Education Lessons Promote the Intercultural Competence of School Children?
See details
(Germany: Latest Thinking, 2017), 11 mins
Our society is becoming more and more diverse concerning cultural, linguistic, ethnic and religious aspects. Therefore, children growing up in a pluralistic society need intercultural competence as a key skill. Schools are a prominent place where children can acquire this competence and some studies suggest that p...
Open Access
(Germany: Latest Thinking, 2017), 11 mins
×
Can We Distribute Goods Efficiently Without Property Rights?
See details
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2017), 15 mins
Even in the absence of absolute property rights, ex-post bargaining may lead to efficient distribution of goods, CHRISTOPH ENGEL explains in this video. The findings of this research thus extend the domain of the Coase theorem. In the experiment, with a society of two individuals and a single commodity, a good end...
Open Access
(Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2017), 15 mins
×
Can We Explain the Co-Evolution of Democracy and Market Economy by Adaptive Preferences?
See details
produced by Latest Thinking (Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2017), 10 mins
In the research presented in this interview, the idea of adaptive preferences is applied to the co-evolution of democracy and market economy. CARL CHRISTIAN VON WEIZSÄCKER explains that the ideal of democracy and market economy though somehow antithetic are inter-dependent in a normative sense: While democracy pr...
Open Access
produced by Latest Thinking (Hamburg, Hamburg State: Latest Thinking, 2017), 10 mins
×

Pages