To help finding solutions to the growing prevalence of overweight and obesity, this field study examined the human tendency to approach food and its relation to BMI. Using a newly developed...Show moreTo help finding solutions to the growing prevalence of overweight and obesity, this field study examined the human tendency to approach food and its relation to BMI. Using a newly developed behavioral measurement method, food approach tendencies of 89 participants were assessed in states of hunger and satiation. Just as earlier lab studies, our results showed that people had approach tendencies to food. As expected, we also showed that participants with a high BMI had stronger food approach tendencies than participants with a low BMI. However, this study failed to confirm the expectation that the increased tendencies for people with a high BMI were more pronounced in states of satiation than in states of hunger. This failure could be attributed to (a) the fact that participants’ BMI did not vary enough, (b) the general disadvantages of our chosen statistical analysis, (c) contextual factors that we could not control for, or (d) the non-optimal exploitation of hunger state effects. Suggestions for future research are given.Show less
Master thesis | Cultural Anthropology and Development Sociology (MSc)
open access
Throughout the last 50 years the Spanish countryside has emptied due to the rural migration from villages to main industrial cities such as Madrid, Bilbao or Barcelona. Now, after decades of...Show moreThroughout the last 50 years the Spanish countryside has emptied due to the rural migration from villages to main industrial cities such as Madrid, Bilbao or Barcelona. Now, after decades of demographic decline, depopulation has become central in public and academic debate about rural development. This growing concern of emptying villages has raised questions about the precarious life and the sense of threat to people who live in these spaces and who are exposed to a loss of services and stable livelihood. This research is an ethnographic analysis of locals’ perspective living in the depopulated village of Yanguas, in Tierras Altas in the province of Soria, the most depopulated area in Spain. Departing from the concept of precarity within global capitalism I will focus on how people of Yanguas sustain a livelihood and how they perceive the village’s livability, while addressing the future perspective of development based on infrastructure creation. The findings in this research suggest that the struggles some people experienced while living in a depopulated village were not derived strictly from the fact that they live in a small community. On the contrary, the experience of depopulation, rather than being the source of precarity, was very often a symptom of other large-scale issues and social changes such as industrialization, delocalization, and patterns of social mobility and migration. This thesis combines audiovisual and text, and the outcome is this article and a film.Show less
The aim of this thesis is to contribute to the discussion about the grounds for the right to citizenship and to whom this applies. The focus here is on the postcolonial migrant, for this is the...Show moreThe aim of this thesis is to contribute to the discussion about the grounds for the right to citizenship and to whom this applies. The focus here is on the postcolonial migrant, for this is the logical first step in acknowledging differences and inequalities within societies. Through analyzing the relationship between the postcolonial migrant and the former ruling nation I claim that the postcolonial migrant has a legitimate moral claim to citizenship in the former colonizing nation, the ‘motherland’. The legitimacy of this claim stems from grievances, an intertwined relationship and gratitude. Which together form the base of a new ground for the right to citizenship, which I propose to call jus paribus. This right to citizenship is a dormant right which should be given to first- and second-generation postcolonial migrants. By granting these generations a path to citizenship former colonizing nations can begin repaying their historical wrongs.Show less
Background and aims: Psychotic disorders (PD) are often accompanied by substance (ab)use. Recent studies demonstrated a connection between these conditions through a common neurocognitive...Show moreBackground and aims: Psychotic disorders (PD) are often accompanied by substance (ab)use. Recent studies demonstrated a connection between these conditions through a common neurocognitive dysfunction. This common dysfunction concerns the executive functions (EF). Through this way it affects both cognitive control and mechanisms of motivation/reward. An EF dysfunction is a core feature of both PD and substance (ab)use. Moreover, it is found to be present prior to the onset of both conditions. It is suggested that this common EF dysfunction highlights a vulnerability for comorbidity. Hence, this study investigated whether a common neurocognitive dysfunction is associated to the co-morbidity of substance (ab)use and PD. Investigating EF in co-morbidity is especially relevant for theories of aetiology, prevention and treatment. First, we examined whether poor EF predicts an increase in substance use in PD patients. Second, we examined whether poor EF, combined with substance use, predicts an increase in substance dependency. Methods: This crosssectional study included 90 patients diagnosed with PD (18-65 years). Data were obtained through self-report questionnaires that measured EF, substance use and -dependency. Three multiple linear regression analyses were calculated to evaluate whether EF scores predicted substance use; three moderated binary logistic regression analyses were calculated to evaluate whether EF scores, moderated by substance use, predicted substance dependency. Findings: Results showed that Initiative deficits predicted substance use (p=.01). Deficits of Emotional regulation (p=.04) and Working memory (p=.03), moderated by substance use, predicted a decrease of dependency. Conclusions: Our results partially confirmed that poor EF predicted substance use and -dependency in PD. It did not lend sufficient support for the idea that the co-morbidity of substance (ab)use and PD is associated with a common EF dysfunction. Nevertheless, results demonstrated a relation between EF and substance (ab)use, namely that PD patients use substances as a means of self-medication in order to cope with an EF dysfunction. It can be concluded that this self-medicative behaviour promotes the development of co-morbid substance (ab)use in PD. This study offers new insights into the selfmedication hypothesis. It demonstrated that, besides psychotic symptoms, an EF dysfunction induces self-medicative substance use in PD. Clinical implications may concern prevention techniques and treatment methods.Show less
Master thesis | Cultural Anthropology and Development Sociology (MSc)
open access
With increasingly pressing and widespread ecological, social and personal crises, the forward march of progress has come to a dead end, and this time is ripe for sensing precarity, as Tsing (2015)...Show moreWith increasingly pressing and widespread ecological, social and personal crises, the forward march of progress has come to a dead end, and this time is ripe for sensing precarity, as Tsing (2015) announces. A sense of precarity is prevalent among practitioners in the Plum Village meditation center. In a case study, I join practitioners to encounter opportunities for engaging with the challenges of precarity and new possibilities for progress. With these experiences I point out the relevance of the Plum Village tradition in our earthwide precarious predicament. My aim in this thesis is to speak to the possibility of changing with mindfulness practice the dualist worldview that is at the root of widespread unsustainable progress practices. The devastating consequences of the forward march toward limitless growth demand a change of direction. My commitment to sustainable, inclusive living leads me to assess to what extent wholesome directions emerge for people and our planet in the other-than-modern views and practices that are taught in the Plum Village tradition.Show less
The aim of this study was to investigate whether the extent to which adolescents feel lost in a fictional story (i.e. narrative transportation) affects the extent to which they justify or forgive...Show moreThe aim of this study was to investigate whether the extent to which adolescents feel lost in a fictional story (i.e. narrative transportation) affects the extent to which they justify or forgive the protagonist’s immoral actions (i.e. moral disengagement). Ninety-two Dutch secondary school students (37 males) between 12 and 16 years of age participated and were randomly assigned to an instructed fiction or uninstructed fiction condition. While participants in both conditions read the same story, only those in the former condition were instructed to immerse themselves in the narrative. Participants then completed the Narrative Transportation Scale and a moral disengagement questionnaire. Contrary to expectations, this study did not find a significant link between transportation and moral disengagement. Moreover, the transportation-enhancing instructions appeared to be ineffective. Although the results indicate transportation does not affect moral disengagement in adolescents, several limitations of the study suggest that further research is warranted.Show less
An understanding of how brand traits influence brand evaluation and positive eWOM intentions is important for companies because it could help them to optimize their brand for success. Based on...Show moreAn understanding of how brand traits influence brand evaluation and positive eWOM intentions is important for companies because it could help them to optimize their brand for success. Based on social perception literature, this study (N = 179) investigated the effect of perceived brand morality, sociability and competence on brand evaluation and positive eWOM intentions. The study also looks at the role of product type. This was investigated using an online survey on six existing brands. The results indicated that morality, sociability and competence together predict a positive brand evaluation. Yet, there is no clear individual contribution from any one of these three brand traits. Additionally, brand competence was the only trait that predicted positive eWOM intentions concerning the brands. No effect for product type was found. The results did not clearly support the hypotheses, but suggest that morality in brand perception is not as important as in social perception. Further research is needed to get a better understanding of the influence of brand traits on consumer behavior.Show less