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21 pages, 1222 KB  
Article
Post-Access Barriers to Digital Market Reach: Motivational and Capability Non-Adoption in Thailand’s Near-Saturated Digital Economy
by Montchai Pinitjitsamut
J. Theor. Appl. Electron. Commer. Res. 2026, 21(7), 199; https://doi.org/10.3390/jtaer21070199 (registering DOI) - 25 Jun 2026
Abstract
This study examines motivational and capability barriers to internet non-adoption in Thailand’s near-saturated digital economy. Using the 2025 Q4 ICT Household Survey conducted by Thailand’s National Statistical Office, the analysis focuses on 20,633 adult non-adopters who report either motivational or capability-related barriers. The [...] Read more.
This study examines motivational and capability barriers to internet non-adoption in Thailand’s near-saturated digital economy. Using the 2025 Q4 ICT Household Survey conducted by Thailand’s National Statistical Office, the analysis focuses on 20,633 adult non-adopters who report either motivational or capability-related barriers. The dependent variable distinguishes capability non-adoption, defined as lack of skill or awareness, from motivational non-adoption, defined as lack of perceived need or privacy/security concerns. Weighted logistic regression with normalised population weights, PSU-clustered robust standard errors, and average marginal effects is used to estimate associations between household ICT access, age, education, employment, smartphone access, and barrier type. Motivational barriers account for 56.2% of the two-category non-adopter population and capability barriers for 43.8%. Although motivational reasons are the more common, household ICT access is positively—if modestly—associated with capability rather than motivational barriers (average marginal effect +1.7 percentage points): capability-constrained non-adopters are concentrated in connected households, the compositional signature predicted by the second-level digital divide. Age does not significantly moderate this association. Among older non-adopters, education, employment, and smartphone access are negatively associated with capability barriers, while household ICT access is not. The findings suggest that in post-access digital economies, household connectivity is insufficient for digital market inclusion; individual-level skills and device access become central to expanding effective digital market reach. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Digital Marketing in Emerging Economies)
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21 pages, 906 KB  
Review
Alkaline Water and Muscle Health in Aging: A Systematic Evidence Map and Translational Appraisal of Human Evidence
by Tariq A. Alalwan, Giuseppe Mazzola, Lucia Chiesa, Mariangela Rondanelli and Simone Perna
J. Ageing Longev. 2026, 6(3), 49; https://doi.org/10.3390/jal6030049 (registering DOI) - 24 Jun 2026
Abstract
Alkaline water is increasingly marketed for musculoskeletal and recovery benefits, yet its relevance to healthy aging, sarcopenia prevention, and functional capacity in older adults remains largely unexplored. This systematic evidence map and translational appraisal examined whether the available comparative human evidence on alkaline [...] Read more.
Alkaline water is increasingly marketed for musculoskeletal and recovery benefits, yet its relevance to healthy aging, sarcopenia prevention, and functional capacity in older adults remains largely unexplored. This systematic evidence map and translational appraisal examined whether the available comparative human evidence on alkaline water is applicable to aging populations and longevity research. Following PRISMA guidance, PubMed and Scopus were searched from January 2005 to September 2025. Eligible studies were controlled or comparative observational human studies reporting muscle strength, physical performance, or recovery outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed using RoB 2, ROBINS-I, and JBI criteria; evidence certainty was judged narratively using GRADE-informed principles. Ten studies met the inclusion criteria. Most enrolled young athletic populations; only two had partial relevance to aging cohorts. Crucially, no study included participants aged 65 years or older or assessed primary sarcopenia-relevant endpoints such as appendicular lean mass, gait speed, or chair-rise performance; this total absence of data in the target demographic represents the central limitation of the current literature. Risk of bias ranged from some concerns to serious. The most consistent signals were short-term improvements in lactate clearance and perceived exertion in young male athletes. Evidence for strength, functional performance, and safety in older adults was absent or indirect. Current evidence, rated low to very low certainty for aging-relevant outcomes, does not support alkaline water as an evidence-based strategy for healthy aging or muscle preservation in older adults. Age-appropriate trials using EWGSOP2-aligned outcomes are urgently needed. Full article
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20 pages, 1976 KB  
Article
Drivers and Barriers of Wine Consumption Among Predominantly Young, Highly Educated Chinese Consumers: A Sociodemographic and Network Analysis
by Lin Zhu, Xinshu Jiang, Yulin Fang and Xiangyu Sun
Foods 2026, 15(13), 2253; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15132253 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Understanding the drivers and barriers of wine consumption is of substantial importance for both market development and sensory science research, and this is particularly salient in rapidly changing non-Western markets. Young, highly educated Chinese consumers represent one of the fastest-growing segments in the [...] Read more.
Understanding the drivers and barriers of wine consumption is of substantial importance for both market development and sensory science research, and this is particularly salient in rapidly changing non-Western markets. Young, highly educated Chinese consumers represent one of the fastest-growing segments in the global wine market, yet large-scale studies of their consumption preferences and rejection patterns remain limited. This study aimed to characterize the conditional dependence structure of wine-consumption behavior in this population and to examine the associations between common consumption barriers and sociodemographic variables. A nationwide cross-sectional online survey collected 4823 valid responses. Non-parametric tests were used to compare sociodemographic groups, and a regularized Gaussian graphical model (GGM) was estimated to characterize the conditional associations among 15 consumption-behavior variables. The sample was dominated by young respondents (18–24 years) and individuals with higher education. The three most frequently endorsed barriers were taste aversion (51.1%), price sensitivity (38.7%), and lack of knowledge (19.6%). Age and education were the most central sociodemographic variables in the network. The knowledge barrier showed a moderate negative conditional association with education (partial r ≈ −0.171), whereas taste aversion—although the most frequently endorsed barrier—did not show clear conditional associations with sociodemographic variables in the network. Gender was not conditionally associated with any other variable in the network. These observations suggest that the three consumption barriers may operate through different network pathways and may therefore have different implications for intervention design, a possibility that warrants further confirmatory and longitudinal research. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sensory and Consumer Sciences)
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16 pages, 949 KB  
Article
Environmental Concern, Coal Transition, and Environmental Justice in Appalachian Communities: Evidence from Kentucky
by Sydney Oluoch, Fiona Southers, Cecelia Harner and Darcy Grence
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6377; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126377 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Viewed by 167
Abstract
Coal mining has historically been a central economic, cultural, and social cornerstone of Appalachian communities. The decline of the coal industry, driven by technological changes, competition from natural gas and renewable energy, environmental regulations, and evolving energy markets, has created major economic and [...] Read more.
Coal mining has historically been a central economic, cultural, and social cornerstone of Appalachian communities. The decline of the coal industry, driven by technological changes, competition from natural gas and renewable energy, environmental regulations, and evolving energy markets, has created major economic and environmental challenges for coal-dependent regions. This study examines Kentucky residents’ perceptions of coal decline and how socio-demographic factors shape environmental concern. Data was collected from 685 Kentucky residents through a statewide online survey conducted in December 2023. Ordered logistic regression was used to examine the influence of gender, age, rural residence, and political affiliation on concerns regarding climate change, environmental degradation, extinction of endangered species, air pollution, and water pollution. Respondents identified health and safety concerns, cleaner energy alternatives, government incentives, and technological changes as major contributors to coal decline, while climate change was viewed as less significant. The findings also reveal support for workforce retention and training in sectors such as construction, transportation, utility work, and renewable energy. Female respondents expressed high levels of environmental concern, while rural residents and Republicans reported lower concern regarding climate change and environmental degradation. Full article
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17 pages, 295 KB  
Article
Beyond the Problem: The Impact of Constructive News Reporting on the Perception of Societal Issues in The Netherlands
by Tineke Prins, Nadia Swijtink, Liesbeth Hermans and Niek Hietbrink
Journal. Media 2026, 7(2), 129; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia7020129 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Viewed by 110
Abstract
This study examined how exposure to constructive audiovisual news shapes people’s perception of societal issues in the Netherlands. An online experiment was conducted among 575 participants aged 18 to 90 years old. Participants were randomly assigned to watch an audiovisual news item, either [...] Read more.
This study examined how exposure to constructive audiovisual news shapes people’s perception of societal issues in the Netherlands. An online experiment was conducted among 575 participants aged 18 to 90 years old. Participants were randomly assigned to watch an audiovisual news item, either constructive or nonconstructive news, about plastic waste in the ocean or the Dutch housing market. The study investigated how these different reporting styles affected participants’ perceptions of the main message, their awareness of the seriousness of the societal issue, and their evaluation of the journalistic quality of the news report. Results showed that, contrary to critics’ concerns, constructive news did not reduce perceived problem awareness: participants across conditions reported similarly high levels of awareness regarding the seriousness of the issues presented. Perceived journalistic quality also remained high in both constructive and nonconstructive conditions, indicating that incorporating constructive elements did not compromise credibility. Furthermore, constructive news appeared to encourage a broader, more solution-oriented perspective, prompting participants to consider opportunities and future prospects. Importantly, this broader perspective did not come at the expense of perceived problem awareness or journalistic quality. Overall, the findings provide empirical support for the value of constructive journalism in the Dutch media context. Full article
19 pages, 2289 KB  
Article
Demographic Aging Profiles in Polish Voivodeships and Their Relevance to Sustainable Regional Development: An Exploratory SOM-Based Typology for 2015–2024
by Agnieszka Sompolska-Rzechuła, Aneta Becker, Anna Oleńczuk-Paszel and Monika Śpiewak-Szyjka
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6365; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126365 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Viewed by 236
Abstract
Population aging has become a major demographic process in modern societies, with its course varying considerably across space. This study examined the scale and dynamics of population aging across Poland’s voivodeships in 2015–2024 and identified its regional patterns. The analysis used data from [...] Read more.
Population aging has become a major demographic process in modern societies, with its course varying considerably across space. This study examined the scale and dynamics of population aging across Poland’s voivodeships in 2015–2024 and identified its regional patterns. The analysis used data from Statistics Poland’s Local Data Bank for 16 voivodeships and included indicators capturing age composition, demographic dependency, and fertility. The analysis was conducted for 16 Polish voivodeships using data from Statistics Poland’s Local Data Bank for 2015–2024 and indicators describing age structure, demographic dependency, and fertility. An analysis of changes in indicator values over time and Kohonen self-organizing maps (SOM) were applied in two model variants, differing in the measure of population aging adopted. To ensure a consistent direction of interpretation, the variables were appropriately transformed and then standardized. The results indicate spatial variation in the level of population aging and differing dynamics of change during the study period. Four regional profiles were identified, reflecting different patterns of indicators describing age structure, demographic burden, and fertility. Kohonen self-organizing maps were used as an exploratory tool to organize voivodeships according to the similarity of their demographic profiles and to describe changes in their profile assignment over time. From the perspective of sustainability, the identified profiles make it possible to capture territorially differentiated demographic conditions that may be relevant to healthcare, long-term care, regional labor markets, social services, and family policy. The results may support sustainable regional development by providing a basis for designing public policy tailored to the specific characteristics of individual voivodeships. Thus, the study links a multidimensional typology of demographic aging with the need for socially sustainable regional policy. The results suggest that SOM can serve as a useful exploratory tool for visualizing and classifying regional demographic aging profiles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Demographic Change and Sustainable Development)
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17 pages, 279 KB  
Article
Carcass Composition, Meat Quality, and Digestive and Skeletal Traits of Muscovy and Pekin Broiler Ducks
by Marcin Wegner, Dariusz Kokoszyński, Kamil Stęczny, Mohamed Saleh, Marek Kotowicz, Joanna Żochowska-Kujawska and Dariusz Piwczyński
Animals 2026, 16(12), 1918; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16121918 (registering DOI) - 20 Jun 2026
Viewed by 190
Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare carcass composition, meat quality, digestive tract morphometry, and leg bone dimensions of Pekin and Muscovy ducks. The study involved 40 birds, including 10 males and 10 females from each genotype, reared to market age. Carcass [...] Read more.
The aim of this study was to compare carcass composition, meat quality, digestive tract morphometry, and leg bone dimensions of Pekin and Muscovy ducks. The study involved 40 birds, including 10 males and 10 females from each genotype, reared to market age. Carcass traits, physicochemical properties of breast and leg muscles, texture parameters, internal organ development, intestinal measurements, and selected dimensions of the femur and tibia were evaluated. The results demonstrated a significant effect of duck genotype (p < 0.05) on carcass weight, dressing percentage, and the proportion of neck, wings, and skin with subcutaneous fat. Genotype also affected meat color (L*, a*, b*), intramuscular fat and collagen content, cooking loss, pH, electrical conductivity, and selected texture parameters of breast muscles. Differences were also observed in the mass and proportion of internal organs, most intestinal morphometric traits, and selected bone measurements. Sex had a significant effect on body and carcass weight, selected meat quality traits, intestinal measurements, and leg bone dimensions, with males generally showing greater body size and more developed skeletal structures. Significant interactions between genotype and sex were observed for several analyzed traits. The findings indicate that both genotype and sex substantially affect slaughter traits and meat quality characteristics of ducks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Poultry)
13 pages, 6016 KB  
Article
Prevalence and Age-Associated Bacterial Chondronecrosis with Osteomyelitis Lesions in Commercial Broiler Flocks in Central Java, Indonesia
by Andi Asnayanti, Aji Praba Baskara, Muhsin Al Anas, Anh Dang Trieu Do, Douglas Rhoads and Adnan A. K. Alrubaye
Animals 2026, 16(12), 1910; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16121910 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 164
Abstract
In tropical countries, broiler chickens are exposed to elevated ambient temperatures and humidity, which are sometimes exacerbated by high stocking densities and poor litter quality, thereby predisposing birds to severe stress, weakening immune function, and promoting BCO lameness progression. BCO lameness causes tremendous [...] Read more.
In tropical countries, broiler chickens are exposed to elevated ambient temperatures and humidity, which are sometimes exacerbated by high stocking densities and poor litter quality, thereby predisposing birds to severe stress, weakening immune function, and promoting BCO lameness progression. BCO lameness causes tremendous economic losses to the poultry industry and increases the risk of foodborne disease. BCO is frequently underdiagnosed in live populations, resulting in an iceberg phenomenon in which subclinical lesions are more prevalent than clinically apparent lameness. Therefore, a total of 500 Cobb500 broiler chickens from five commercial broiler flocks in Central Java, Indonesia, were randomly selected, weighed, slaughtered, and necropsied to evaluate the prevalence of BCO lameness lesions in the proximal femoral and tibial heads across distinct market ages ranging from 33 to 43 days. The ambient housing temperature in the region can reach 28–29 °C during the day. The results showed that more than 80% of the samples had normal femora at 33 days of age with an average body weight of 1.9 kg. A significant increase in the frequency and severity of femoral and tibial lesions was recorded at 35 to 36 days of age, when the average body weight reached approximately 2.5 kg. The high frequency of worsening BCO lesions observed during the 5th week suggests an age-related pattern in BCO occurrence during the late stages of grow-out. These findings suggest that improvements in nutrition, environment, and production management strategies before 36 days of age are necessary to mitigate the impact of BCO lameness in the poultry industry. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Bacterial Disease Research in Livestock and Poultry)
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19 pages, 3438 KB  
Review
Eating Behavior and Eating Habits: From Infancy to Adolescence
by Ivie Maneschy, María L. Miguel-Berges, Andrea Jimeno-Martínez, Guiomar Masip and Luis A. Moreno
Nutrients 2026, 18(12), 2000; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu18122000 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 321
Abstract
Eating behavior and eating habits are shaped from the earliest stages of life through interactions among biological, familial, social, and environmental factors. The aim of this narrative review is to integrate evidence on the early-life determinants of eating behavior and their influence on [...] Read more.
Eating behavior and eating habits are shaped from the earliest stages of life through interactions among biological, familial, social, and environmental factors. The aim of this narrative review is to integrate evidence on the early-life determinants of eating behavior and their influence on dietary intake from infancy to adolescence. A narrative review was conducted with a structured search approach prioritized on longitudinal studies, intervention trials, and policy evaluations when available, and using cross-sectional evidence mainly to describe patterns and sociodemographic factors. Synthesizing the current evidence, our framework proposes that breastfeeding, responsive complementary feeding, and self-regulatory parenting are associated with higher responsiveness to internal hunger, satiety cues, and preference for nutrient-dense foods. Conversely, coercive practices, early exposure to highly palatable foods, and the influence of food marketing are linked to dominant hedonic responses and impulsive consumption patterns. Furthermore, family environments characterized by stress or food insecurity, together with high access to low-nutrient foods, may increase vulnerability to poor eating habits and emotional eating during adolescence. Overall, the evidence highlights the need for preventive interventions that integrate parenting support, school food education, digital marketing regulation policies, and the promotion of healthy food environments across multiple sectors. Understanding the biological, psychological, and social factors linking early determinants to dietary intake and eating behaviors across development is essential for promoting a balanced relationship with food and preventing chronic diseases from an early age. Full article
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29 pages, 3413 KB  
Article
Multi-Market Coordination Operation Strategy for PV-Storage Systems Considering Zone-Based Frequency Regulation Strategy
by Xiao Ye, Zhibo Liu, Jiajia Zhang, Jindong Huang and Hejun Yang
Processes 2026, 14(12), 1995; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14121995 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 146
Abstract
Energy storage systems (ESSs) installed alongside traditional photovoltaic (PV) power plants are primarily used to track planned output, which often results in low utilization rates and extended payback periods. Moreover, existing research inadequately addresses actual grid frequency fluctuation characteristics and lacks multi-timescale optimization [...] Read more.
Energy storage systems (ESSs) installed alongside traditional photovoltaic (PV) power plants are primarily used to track planned output, which often results in low utilization rates and extended payback periods. Moreover, existing research inadequately addresses actual grid frequency fluctuation characteristics and lacks multi-timescale optimization frameworks. To address these issues, this paper proposes a day-ahead and intraday multi-market coordinated rolling optimization strategy that integrates energy market trading with Automatic Generation Control (AGC) frequency regulation services through a zone-based frequency regulation control strategy. The strategy first defines distinct regulation zones based on regional control deviations, enabling a dynamic power allocation approach for the energy storage system. Recognizing that conventional constant power control can lead to battery overcharging, over-discharging, and reduced cycle life, the strategy introduces state of charge (SOC)-based variable power charging and discharging constraint coefficients. These constraints ensure the battery operates safely within its optimal range. Furthermore, an electrochemical energy storage life decay model is developed to quantify battery degradation. To accommodate the uncertainty in PV output, Latin hypercube sampling is employed. A day-ahead dispatch model is established to maximize the system’s total daily operating revenue, and rolling optimization is applied during the intraday phase to correct deviations from the day-ahead forecast. Finally, simulation studies using actual data from a PV power plant demonstrate that the proposed strategy achieves a total daily revenue of 107,477 ¥, representing a 24.6% improvement over energy market-only participation; battery aging costs are reduced by 11.1% compared to the scenario without zone-based frequency regulation control. Results indicate that the proposed strategy effectively balances battery life degradation against market revenue, significantly improving the overall operational efficiency and economic viability of PV-storage hybrid systems. Full article
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38 pages, 3294 KB  
Article
Predicting Stock Volatility Using Multidimensional Financial Risk: Evidence from Machine Learning and Hybrid GARCH–Deep Learning Models
by Yara Ibrahim, Khaled Hussainey and Taghred Mokhtar Sayed Moawad
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(6), 444; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19060444 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 291
Abstract
This study investigates the determinants and predictability of stock return volatility by integrating firm-specific financial characteristics with advanced econometric and volatility modeling techniques. Using an unbalanced panel dataset comprising 1596 firms and 19,752 firm-year observations from MENA stock markets over the period 2010–2024, [...] Read more.
This study investigates the determinants and predictability of stock return volatility by integrating firm-specific financial characteristics with advanced econometric and volatility modeling techniques. Using an unbalanced panel dataset comprising 1596 firms and 19,752 firm-year observations from MENA stock markets over the period 2010–2024, the analysis employs fixed-effects panel regression models, conditional volatility models, and machine learning-based forecasting approaches. Following extensive diagnostic testing, including tests for heteroskedasticity, serial correlation, cross-sectional dependence, and model specification, a two-way fixed-effects model with Driscoll–Kraay standard errors is adopted as the preferred estimation framework. The results indicate that liquidity ratio, cash ratio, sales growth, firm age, lagged volatility, and lagged returns are significant determinants of stock return volatility, whereas leverage, tangibility, board independence, firm size, Tobin’s Q, and profitability do not exhibit statistically significant effects after controlling for firm-specific and time-specific heterogeneity. The volatility analysis reveals substantial persistence in stock return volatility, with the EGARCH-t specification providing the best fit among the competing GARCH-family models according to the Akaike Information Criterion. The estimated asymmetry parameters indicate that volatility responds differently to positive and negative shocks, supporting the presence of asymmetric volatility dynamics and the suitability of asymmetric volatility models. The forecasting analysis shows that advanced machine learning and deep learning models achieve competitive predictive performance; however, differences in predictive accuracy across models are generally modest. Full article
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28 pages, 2265 KB  
Article
Architectural Pathways and Integration Constraints for Feasible Onboard Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy for Battery Electric Vehicles
by Roger Bautista-Florensa, Daniel Montesinos-Miracle, Alberto Gómez-Núñez and Carlos Abomailek
World Electr. Veh. J. 2026, 17(6), 315; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj17060315 (registering DOI) - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 288
Abstract
Reliable battery health assessment is essential to accelerate battery electric vehicle (BEV) adoption, yet most existing in-vehicle methods do not capture the complex processes driving ageing. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) offers deeper diagnostic insight but faces significant architectural and integration constraints. This study [...] Read more.
Reliable battery health assessment is essential to accelerate battery electric vehicle (BEV) adoption, yet most existing in-vehicle methods do not capture the complex processes driving ageing. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) offers deeper diagnostic insight but faces significant architectural and integration constraints. This study establishes a rigorous system-level framework for practicable onboard EIS implementation, focusing on the integration within Battery Management System (BMS) and powertrain architectures. Various integration topologies for cell-, module- and pack-level EIS are evaluated, highlighting their key trade-offs. The viability of the presented architectures is assessed through an application-specific Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) for mass-market, high-performance and circular economy use-cases. This study confirms the feasibility of onboard EIS while providing industry and scientific stakeholders with practical guidance to advance battery diagnostics for next-generation BEVs. Full article
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27 pages, 1593 KB  
Article
Sustainability Beyond Price: Empirical Validation of a Multidimensional Framework of Online Consumers’ Preferences and Attitudes
by Marko Veličković, Mateja Čuček, Jelena Ivetić, Đurđica Stojanović, Sonja Mlaker Kač and Borut Jereb
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6247; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126247 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 302
Abstract
This study introduces a comprehensive framework for understanding sustainable online shopping preferences, validated using survey data collected in Serbia and Slovenia in 2025 (n = 572), thereby enhancing its generalizability. The primary aim of this research is to examine the extent to [...] Read more.
This study introduces a comprehensive framework for understanding sustainable online shopping preferences, validated using survey data collected in Serbia and Slovenia in 2025 (n = 572), thereby enhancing its generalizability. The primary aim of this research is to examine the extent to which specific environmental, social, and economic indicators influence decision-making processes for online purchasing and delivery. A detailed quantitative analysis was conducted using a structured questionnaire that included a wide range of variables related to online shopping behaviors and delivery preferences. The findings indicate that preferences for sustainability are inherently complex and multifaceted, shaped by critical factors such as environmental concerns, social responsibility, trust, skepticism towards sustainability claims, willingness to pay (WTP), and price sensitivity. Demographic variables, particularly gender and age, show consistent links to preferences for environmental considerations and corporate social responsibility (CSR), while income impacts trust-related behaviors and WTP. Furthermore, the analysis distinguishes between two distinct decision-making approaches: a value-driven sustainability cluster represented by EcoIndex, SocialIndex, and WTPIndex, and a cost-minimization strategy focused on price sensitivity (PriceIndex), with trust acting as a related yet separate factor (CredibilityIndex). Overall, this study emphasizes that a range of interconnected dimensions significantly shape sustainable online shopping preferences. The study was conducted in two developing European countries. Additionally, the findings highlight the need to address universal market barriers, such as price sensitivity, information asymmetry, and consumer skepticism. In a business context, they underscore the importance of adopting advanced analytical methods to enhance decision-making and optimize sustainable business strategies. Full article
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20 pages, 3942 KB  
Article
A Competent Antiviral, Antimicrobial, Nontoxic Nanostructured Lipid Carrier System for Safe Use as a Hand Sanitizer: In Vitro and In Vivo Studies
by Eman Samy Shalaby, Mohamed Azab El-Liethy, Sherif Abd-Elmaksoud, Corrado Tagliati, Rawia Mohamed Khalil and Said Ibrahim Shalaby
Biomolecules 2026, 16(6), 886; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom16060886 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 224
Abstract
Effective hand washing takes time and hand sanitizers that contain alcohol have a number of drawbacks, and frequent use of alcohol may cause skin damage. The objective of this study is to formulate nanostructured lipid carrier systems containing chlorhexidine digluconate to be applied [...] Read more.
Effective hand washing takes time and hand sanitizers that contain alcohol have a number of drawbacks, and frequent use of alcohol may cause skin damage. The objective of this study is to formulate nanostructured lipid carrier systems containing chlorhexidine digluconate to be applied topically for hand hygiene, especially for people sensitive to alcohol. A cytotoxicity experiment was conducted to ascertain the safe dosage for each of the three nano-cream formulas (F1, F2 and F3). Following each treatment, the viral titer was assessed using tissue culture infectious dose50 and standard plaque assays. The selected formulation was characterized rheologically. Furthermore, fifteen volunteers of various ages and genders participated in the vivo antimicrobial test of the selected formulation as a hand sanitizer. All of the formulas were found to be safe. Using the disc diffusion method, the three formulations exhibited in vitro antimicrobial effects against different microbes. F1 showed biphasic release, reasonable skin deposition and spherical droplets under a microscope. F1 exhibited a non-Newtonian shear thinning flow behavior. After 30 min, the reduction values for rotavirus and Phix-174 were 21 and 4%, respectively. Additionally, the impact of F1 was assessed on the infectivity of simian rotavirus sa-11 (ds RNA) and Phix-174 (ss DNA) bacteriophage. According to the findings of the in vivo study, the percentage of total bacterial counts that were removed varied from 91 to 100%. Moreover, the range of the removal percentage of total fungi was 95.38 to 100%. In summary, F1 can be used as an economic, safe, and effective hand antiseptic. It can also completely replace alcohol in the market. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Nano-Based Drug Delivery Systems)
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23 pages, 3769 KB  
Article
Is the Tripartite Life Model Being Reconfigured? An Exploratory Study on Retirement Expectations Among Millennials and Generation Z in Portugal
by Ana Maria da Costa Oliveira and Catarina Silva Simão
J. Ageing Longev. 2026, 6(2), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/jal6020046 - 15 Jun 2026
Viewed by 120
Abstract
The classic tripartite life-course model (education, work, and retirement) is under increasing pressure from rising longevity and structural labour-market change. This study examines how Millennials and Generation Z in Portugal conceptualise retirement and the life course, asking whether these cohorts adhere to a [...] Read more.
The classic tripartite life-course model (education, work, and retirement) is under increasing pressure from rising longevity and structural labour-market change. This study examines how Millennials and Generation Z in Portugal conceptualise retirement and the life course, asking whether these cohorts adhere to a standardised, sequential logic or aspire to more fluid, multi-stage trajectories, and whether observed differences reflect generation or socioeconomic position. A cross-sectional survey of 234 participants aged 18–43 assessed perceptions of retirement, openness to non-linear life cycles, future concerns, preparation strategies, and orientations towards lifelong learning. Responses were analysed using non-parametric tests (Mann–Whitney U, Kruskal–Wallis) and multivariate linear regression, with outcomes stratified by income, education, and occupational status. Participants showed a widespread preference for greater flexibility around the tripartite sequence rather than its abandonment, the statutory retirement age persisting as a reference point. Trust in the public pension system was low and cross-cutting, with over 70% doubting its capacity to ensure an adequate retirement, while Generation Z reported significantly greater concern about losing professional purpose. Socioeconomic position was a more consistent stratifier than generation for financial preparation, which rose with income and education; distrust, by contrast, was predicted by neither socioeconomic position nor generation in multivariate models. These findings indicate that biographical deinstitutionalisation may already be underway among younger Portuguese cohorts, with structural risks increasingly individualised, carrying implications for the redesign of life-course policies and social protection systems in an era of longevity. Full article
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