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12 pages, 1388 KB  
Article
You Otter Not Talk: A Preliminary Study of Asian Small-Clawed Otter Vocalizations and Activity in the Presence of Visitors and Staff
by Paige Klingner, Bridget Cooper-Rogers and Eduardo J. Fernandez
J. Zool. Bot. Gard. 2026, 7(2), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg7020024 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Abstract
Otters spend a considerable amount of time vocalizing within zoos and other captive settings. Although associations between these vocalizations and social activity have been investigated prior, it is not always clear how this is reflected in interactions with people under typical zoo conditions, [...] Read more.
Otters spend a considerable amount of time vocalizing within zoos and other captive settings. Although associations between these vocalizations and social activity have been investigated prior, it is not always clear how this is reflected in interactions with people under typical zoo conditions, including interactions with zoo visitors and staff. In addition, the implications for zoo welfare and their relation to vocalizing are also not clear, warranting greater investigation to identify potential future welfare metrics for otter species. We examined zoo Asian small-clawed otter vocalizations and general activity in the presence of people, including both visitors and staff. Our focus was on measuring vocalizations as a binomial response (yes/no) in relation to two variables: (a) people, and (b) time. In addition, we also measured differences in vocalizations during sessions, when visitors were present with or without staff. Finally, we measured general otter activity during sessions when 50% or more of the observation intervals had people present (More People), as opposed to sessions where less than 50% of all intervals had a person present (Less People). Overall, otters were statistically more active and less out of sight when more people were present; a weak to moderate correlation was observed between vocalizations and people, a weak correlation was observed between vocalizations and time, and there was no statistically significant difference in vocalizations of the otters in the presence of visitors regardless of staff presence. These results suggest that the measured variables showed no evidence of an overtly negative visitor effect for the otters and may have produced a potentially enriching effect. In addition, measuring multiple variables, including time of day, diurnal patterns, feeding patterns, weather, and providing experimental control could aid in identifying the potential visitor effect for otters and other zoo animals. Full article
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16 pages, 285 KB  
Article
The Impact of ESG Compliance and Greenwashing Risk on the Value of Companies Listed on the Bucharest Stock Exchange
by Ioana Andrioaia, Veronica Grosu, Svetlana Mihaila and Alina Butnaru Ciobotar
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(6), 448; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19060448 (registering DOI) - 20 Jun 2026
Abstract
Corporate sustainability and the reliability of ESG reporting have gained relevance in the evaluation of listed companies, particularly in emerging capital markets, where reporting practices are still in their early stages of development. The purpose of this study is to analyze the relationship [...] Read more.
Corporate sustainability and the reliability of ESG reporting have gained relevance in the evaluation of listed companies, particularly in emerging capital markets, where reporting practices are still in their early stages of development. The purpose of this study is to analyze the relationship between the quality of ESG reporting, the risk of greenwashing estimated using a proxy derived from reported information, and the market value of companies listed on the Bucharest Stock Exchange. The research employs a mixed-methods design, involving content analysis of annual reports, sustainability reports, and sustainability statements for 25 companies over the 2020–2024 period. The scores corresponding to the Environmental, Social, and Governance dimensions, as well as the proxy for greenwashing risk, were developed using an ordinal scoring grid, which was validated through inter-rater assessment. During the course of the study, the empirical relationships were tested using pooled OLS specifications on short panel data, incorporating the natural logarithm of market capitalization, financial controls, year effects, and sector dummy variables. The results highlight the presence of an association between the quality of ESG reporting and market value, particularly for environmental and social dimensions, while the greenwashing risk proxy exhibits a limited statistical influence. The study contributes to the literature on ESG reporting in emerging markets and highlights the need for a cautious interpretation of indicators constructed based on corporate disclosures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainability and Finance)
26 pages, 5463 KB  
Article
Material, Typological, and Functional Transformation of Vernacular Rural Housing in the Ecuadorian Andes: A Comparative Study in Saraguro
by Karina Monteros-Cueva and Aitana Paola Quiroga-Quichimbo
Buildings 2026, 16(12), 2451; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16122451 (registering DOI) - 20 Jun 2026
Abstract
Vernacular housing in the Andean region embodies long-standing building knowledge, environmental adaptation, and forms of social organization rooted in rural life. Over recent decades, these dwellings have undergone visible transformations linked to migration, changing aspirations, and the growing presence of industrialized construction materials. [...] Read more.
Vernacular housing in the Andean region embodies long-standing building knowledge, environmental adaptation, and forms of social organization rooted in rural life. Over recent decades, these dwellings have undergone visible transformations linked to migration, changing aspirations, and the growing presence of industrialized construction materials. Rather than disappearing, vernacular forms have increasingly merged with contemporary solutions, producing hybrid architectural landscapes whose local dynamics are still insufficiently documented. This study analyzes the material, typological, and functional transformation of rural housing in Las Lagunas and Quisquinchir, two Indigenous communities located in Saraguro, Loja, Ecuador. A total of 192 houses were recorded through field observation and a structured digital survey implemented with KoBoCollect. The information was processed in R using descriptive statistics, contingency tables, chi-square tests, Cramér’s V, and standardized residual analysis. The findings show that architectural change in both communities does not occur through a simple replacement of traditional housing by modern models. Instead, vernacular, hybrid, and modern/eclectic typologies coexist within the same rural setting, revealing uneven and locally specific processes of transformation. The clearest differences emerge in construction materiality. Las Lagunas preserves a stronger presence of traditional wall systems, especially adobe and bahareque, while Quisquinchir shows a broader incorporation of industrialized materials, particularly concrete block. Statistical analysis confirmed significant associations between community and wall material, as well as between typology and wall material, whereas the relationship between community and architectural typology was comparatively weaker. Functional changes were also identified through the reduction or reconfiguration of intermediate spaces such as portals, patios, and corridors, suggesting a gradual shift toward more enclosed and specialized domestic environments. These results contribute empirical evidence for understanding architectural hybridization in Indigenous rural territories and support conservation and planning approaches capable of recognizing continuity, adaptation, and change within evolving Andean built landscapes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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15 pages, 278 KB  
Article
The Catholic Religion and Its Influence on Maltese Trans Students: Sociological and Critical Anticolonial Implications for Educational Inclusion
by Manuel J. Ellul
Religions 2026, 17(6), 736; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17060736 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 151
Abstract
This study examines the schooling experiences of transgender students in Malta within the broader historical and sociocultural influence of the Catholic religion, focusing on how religious discourse shapes processes of inclusion and exclusion. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with transgender students, parents, educators, and [...] Read more.
This study examines the schooling experiences of transgender students in Malta within the broader historical and sociocultural influence of the Catholic religion, focusing on how religious discourse shapes processes of inclusion and exclusion. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with transgender students, parents, educators, and school administrators, the findings reveal that Catholic doctrine and its presence within school contexts contribute to the erasure of transgender identities from early childhood onward. In contrast to ecclesiastical narratives that frame transgender identity as a form of “gender ideology,” participants’ accounts demonstrate that social and medical transitions function as critical strategies for survival, well-being, and self-recognition. Methodologically, the study employs qualitative thematic analysis informed by a critical anticolonial framework, enabling an interrogation of how religious authority intersects with colonial legacies to regulate gender and embodiment. The analysis further highlights tensions between the Catholic religion and contemporary human rights and ethical frameworks, particularly in relation to inclusion. The study concludes that if the Catholic religion is to retain relevance within school contexts, it must undergo a substantive ethical reorientation toward inclusivity, recognizing transgender embodiment and agency. In line with emancipatory pedagogical traditions, this entails reimagining the role of the Catholic religion as one that actively supports social justice, critical consciousness, and transformative practices of inclusion. Full article
33 pages, 36610 KB  
Article
Explainable GeoAI for Photovoltaic Site Suitability Assessment in Rajasthan, India: A Rule-Derived, Spatially Validated Decision-Support Framework
by Chinmay Nischal, Jagriti Gupta, Shri Krishna Mishra, Saurabh Singh, Ram Avtar, Fahdah Falah Ben Hasher, Zoe Kanetaki, Antreas Kantaros and Mohamed Zhran
Land 2026, 15(6), 1080; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15061080 - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 171
Abstract
The rapid transition toward renewable energy requires transparent and spatially explicit methods for identifying suitable photovoltaic (PV) development areas. This study develops a geospatial artificial intelligence (GeoAI) decision-support framework for PV site suitability assessment in Rajasthan, India. Eleven harmonized predictors were used: global [...] Read more.
The rapid transition toward renewable energy requires transparent and spatially explicit methods for identifying suitable photovoltaic (PV) development areas. This study develops a geospatial artificial intelligence (GeoAI) decision-support framework for PV site suitability assessment in Rajasthan, India. Eleven harmonized predictors were used: global horizontal irradiance (GHI), photovoltaic power output (PVOUT), temperature, wind speed, aerosol optical depth (AOD), elevation, slope, albedo, land use/land cover (LULC), distance to roads, and distance to power lines. Reference labels were generated from an explicit rule-derived suitability index, class thresholds, and exclusion logic; therefore, the machine-learning task was to reproduce a transparent suitability framework rather than to predict observed PV yield or project-level performance. Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) was compared with simpler baseline models, evaluated using random and spatial-block validation, and interpreted using SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP). Independent overlays with known solar-installation records, presence-background robustness testing, and uncertainty/sensitivity analysis were used to examine spatial plausibility, spatial autocorrelation, deterministic label effects, and parameter uncertainty. The resulting outputs include pixel-level suitability zones, contiguous candidate polygons, district-level capacity-oriented summaries, and planning-priority classes. The framework is intended as a risk-aware regional screening tool: high model agreement indicates consistency with the constructed suitability labels, while final project decisions require parcel-scale land, grid, environmental, social, and economic assessment. Full article
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28 pages, 4743 KB  
Article
Technology Blockade and R&D Investment Under Asymmetric Spillovers
by Na Zhang and Zhongzhe Zhang
Mathematics 2026, 14(12), 2169; https://doi.org/10.3390/math14122169 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 82
Abstract
This paper examines how technology blockade affects leader and follower firms’ research and development (R&D) incentives and their cooperation decisions under asymmetric knowledge spillovers, while also exploring the role of government subsidies in mitigating market failures and restoring cooperation incentives. Motivated by the [...] Read more.
This paper examines how technology blockade affects leader and follower firms’ research and development (R&D) incentives and their cooperation decisions under asymmetric knowledge spillovers, while also exploring the role of government subsidies in mitigating market failures and restoring cooperation incentives. Motivated by the increasing restrictions on knowledge diffusion in high-technology industries, we develop a two-stage game in which firms first choose R&D investment and then compete in quantities under both non-cooperative and cooperative regimes. Our analysis shows that the impact of technology blockade on firms’ R&D investment and profit distribution depends on R&D efficiency and the presence of asymmetric knowledge spillovers. Specifically, under non-cooperative behavior, the interaction between asymmetric spillovers and R&D efficiency generates nonlinear effects on both R&D efforts and profit allocation. Under cooperative regimes, although firms can internalize spillovers, technology blockade reduces coordination benefits and leads to asymmetric profits, resulting in the absence of a self-enforcing cooperation region. Furthermore, our results indicate that government subsidies can partially or fully restore cooperation incentives, thereby increasing R&D investment and enhancing social welfare in most cases. These findings highlight a substitution effect between policy intervention and external technological constraints, emphasizing the importance of targeted subsidies in mitigating the adverse effects of technology blockade on innovation and collaboration. Full article
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20 pages, 639 KB  
Article
Myth, Power and Practice: A Bourdieusian Interpretation of Greentown’s Criminal Network
by Andy Bray and Séan Redmond
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 1012; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16061012 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 234
Abstract
This paper offers a theoretical reinterpretation of the groundbreaking Greentown study using Pierre Bourdieu’s Theory of Practice. Rather than presenting new empirical findings, it examines previously published research to study children’s involvement in organised crime networks through a relational, practice-based lens. Dominant approaches [...] Read more.
This paper offers a theoretical reinterpretation of the groundbreaking Greentown study using Pierre Bourdieu’s Theory of Practice. Rather than presenting new empirical findings, it examines previously published research to study children’s involvement in organised crime networks through a relational, practice-based lens. Dominant approaches to youth offending and gang participation tend to focus on individual risk factors, programme effectiveness or structural indicators and can struggle to account for the enduring social logics through which criminal authority is reproduced across generations. Drawing on Bourdieusian concepts of field, capital and symbolic power, the paper interprets Greentown as a localised social field in which a core family network accumulates and deploys social, cultural, economic and symbolic capital to secure compliance, cultivate loyalty and sustain informal forms of governance. Attention is paid to the role of symbolic narratives and mythmaking in minimising the visible presence of the state and normalising participation for young people and residents. The analysis illustrates how such symbolic orders can persist even where individual agents desist, contributing to the relative stability of networked harm. The paper argues that Bourdieu provides a coherent and theoretically disciplined framework for understanding organised criminal networks as socially embedded fields and suggests that interventions attentive to symbolic power and misrecognition may complement existing criminal justice responses. While explicitly interpretive in scope, the paper points towards the value of theory-led re-readings of empirical research for addressing the complex and ‘wicked’ nature of organised networked offending. Full article
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26 pages, 1999 KB  
Article
Demographic Characteristics of Minor Victims of Sexual Offenses in Romania—A Retrospective Study
by Ștefania Andrei, Daria Hemeș, Adelina Dubaș, Alina Frunză, Daniela Gabriela Andrei, Cosmina Chivu, Anna Florescu, Matei Dragodan, Albert Merfu, Bogdan Pădure and Sorin Hostiuc
Forensic Sci. 2026, 6(2), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/forensicsci6020054 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 183
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a serious public health and forensic issue, associated with significant psychological, psychiatric, and social consequences. However, data from forensic psychiatric evaluations regarding victims of this type of abuse are limited, especially in Romania. This study primarily aimed [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a serious public health and forensic issue, associated with significant psychological, psychiatric, and social consequences. However, data from forensic psychiatric evaluations regarding victims of this type of abuse are limited, especially in Romania. This study primarily aimed to profile the demographic, clinical, and psychosocial characteristics of minors who were victims of sexual offenses and underwent forensic psychiatric evaluation. Secondary objectives included examining relationships between demographic and clinical variables, describing patterns of victimization, and analyzing the co-occurrence of vulnerability factors. Methods: This study was retrospective, descriptive, and analytical, including 51 minors (under 18 years of age) examined at the Mina Minovici National Institute of Legal Medicine (INML), between 2013 and 2025. Data extracted from forensic psychiatric reports included demographic variables, the type of offense, psychiatric diagnosis, psychological issues, intellectual functioning, family environment, and relationship with the aggressor. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, Pearson χ2 and Fisher’s exact tests, binary logistic regression, and nonparametric tests for cumulative vulnerability. Results: The sample was predominantly female (94.1%), with a mean age of 13.75 years. Rape was the most frequent offense (45.1%). Most victims originated from disorganized family environments or were institutionalized (70.6%), and 60% had below-normal intellectual functioning. A psychiatric diagnosis was present in 56.9% of cases, while 70.6% exhibited psychological issues. Within an exploratory logistic regression model that did not reach overall statistical significance (omnibus likelihood ratio test χ2 = 9.31; p = 0.097), the presence of a psychiatric diagnosis showed the strongest individual association with psychological issues (OR = 5.17; 95% CI, 1.22–21.85; p = 0.026). Cases in which the aggressor was not related to the family environment were the most frequent (60.8%), followed by cases involving family members (23.5%). Most subjects displayed multiple co-occurring vulnerability factors. When the cumulative vulnerability score was recalculated to exclude psychological issues (to avoid construction-induced circularity), higher vulnerability remained significantly associated with extrafamilial victimization (Kruskal–Wallis H = 6.93; p = 0.031), but was no longer associated with psychological issues themselves (Mann–Whitney U = 298.0; p = 0.56), indicating that the originally observed association was an artefact of the score’s construction. Conclusions: Minors who are victims of sexual abuse often face multiple overlapping vulnerabilities, including unstable family environments, cognitive impairments, and psychiatric conditions. These factors frequently coexist in victims evaluated in forensic psychiatric settings and are associated with psychological issues and complex victimization profiles. The findings emphasize the importance of comprehensive, multidisciplinary, and victim-centered methods in forensic psychiatric evaluations. Full article
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16 pages, 1129 KB  
Article
Autistic Trait Profiles Across Mood and Psychotic Spectrum Disorders: A Transdiagnostic Outpatient Study
by Michele Ribolsi, Antonio Maria D’Onofrio, Alexia Koukopoulos, Federico Fiori Nastro, Martina Pelle, Alessandro Michele Giannico, Sara Barbonetti, Lodovico Maria Balzoni, Marco Cataldo Zaza, Giorgio Di Lorenzo, Gabriele Sani and Giovanni Camardese
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(12), 4659; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15124659 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 229
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Autistic traits are distributed dimensionally across psychiatric populations, yet their systematic assessment in mood and psychotic spectrum disorders remains limited. While elevated autistic traits have been documented in schizophrenia spectrum disorders, evidence in bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Autistic traits are distributed dimensionally across psychiatric populations, yet their systematic assessment in mood and psychotic spectrum disorders remains limited. While elevated autistic traits have been documented in schizophrenia spectrum disorders, evidence in bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) is scarce, and no studies have applied the clinician-rated PANSS Autism Severity Score (PAUSS) to mood disorder populations. This study aims to investigate the presence and severity of autistic traits across psychotic spectrum disorder (PSD), BD, and MDD in an outpatient sample using the PAUSS. Methods: In this cross-sectional naturalistic outpatient study, clinically stable adult patients with MDD, BD, or PSD, without autism spectrum disorder, were assessed with the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and PAUSS. Group comparisons, adjusted models, correlation analyses, principal component analysis, and multinomial logistic regression were performed. Results: A total of 165 patients were included (MDD, n = 84, BD, n = 45, PSD, n = 36). Compared with the mood disorder groups, PSD patients were younger and showed higher BPRS scores. PSD was also characterized by significantly higher PAUSS total, social, and communication scores, whereas PAUSS RRB did not differ in univariate analyses. In the overall sample, BPRS severity correlated positively with all PAUSS dimensions, while age showed only weak or non-significant associations. Diagnosis-stratified analyses revealed that the association between psychopathology and autistic traits was present in MDD and BD, but not in PSD. PCA showed that autistic trait dimensions converged on a broad common profile and differed across diagnostic groups, with PSD showing the most distinct pattern. In multinomial logistic regression, higher BPRS, higher PAUSS social and communication scores, and younger age independently distinguished PSD from MDD and BD; PAUSS RRB showed an inverse association only in the multivariable model. Conclusions: This study supports a transdiagnostic perspective on autistic traits in adult psychiatric populations, highlighting disorder-specific differences across diagnostic categories. Social and communication impairments emerged as key dimensions distinguishing PSD from mood disorders. Assessing autistic traits in psychiatric settings may improve diagnostic precision and inform personalized, stratified treatment approaches. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Schizophrenia and Related Psychotic Disorders)
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27 pages, 386 KB  
Article
Framing Youth Crime, Silencing Educational Exclusion: A Qualitative Content Analysis of Ecuadorian Digital Press Coverage in 2025
by Fernanda Tusa, Ignacio Aguaded and Santiago Tejedor
Youth 2026, 6(2), 79; https://doi.org/10.3390/youth6020079 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 103
Abstract
This article examines how Ecuadorian national digital newspapers represented adolescents and youth-coded young adults associated with crime during 2025, with particular attention to lexical labeling, moral attribution, visual framing, editorial prominence, news values and the near-presence or absence of educational discourse. The study [...] Read more.
This article examines how Ecuadorian national digital newspapers represented adolescents and youth-coded young adults associated with crime during 2025, with particular attention to lexical labeling, moral attribution, visual framing, editorial prominence, news values and the near-presence or absence of educational discourse. The study is based on qualitative content analysis of Spanish-language digital press coverage published in El Universo, El Comercio, Extra, La Hora, GK, Primicias, Vistazo, El Mercurio and Expreso across seven journalistic genres: news, note, feature article, report, editorial, interview and chronicle. The article argues that media discourse does not merely describe youth violence; it actively constructs public intelligibility about who young people are, how danger is recognized and whether social responses are imagined in punitive, preventive or restorative terms. Grounded in media framing theory, news values, moral panic studies, child-friendly justice, critical sociology, school push-out scholarship and philosophies of education and human development, the article shows the inferential route from media representation to educational reintegration: when coverage individualizes adolescent violence, minimizes school interruption and masks structural conditions, it narrows the policy imagination through which young people are understood as educable, rights-bearing and recoverable subjects. The paper ultimately argues that the long-term reduction of violence in Ecuador requires not only security responses but also an integral reintegration agenda centered on education, dignified work, child-sensitive justice and restorative social policy. Full article
24 pages, 858 KB  
Article
Infrastructure Gaps in Social Media-Based Programming Education: A Large-Scale Analysis of Learner Support Needs and the Case for Technical Presence
by Zhuoyuan Tang, Wei Wei, Kai Liang and Chi Kin Lam
Systems 2026, 14(6), 685; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14060685 - 15 Jun 2026
Viewed by 214
Abstract
Social media platforms increasingly function as informal education systems for programming learning, yet the systemic support structures these environments provide remain poorly understood. We analyzed 40,004 comments from programming tutorial videos on a major social media platform (2016–April 2025) to identify patterns of [...] Read more.
Social media platforms increasingly function as informal education systems for programming learning, yet the systemic support structures these environments provide remain poorly understood. We analyzed 40,004 comments from programming tutorial videos on a major social media platform (2016–April 2025) to identify patterns of learner support needs at scale. Using BERTopic, we identified twelve discussion themes. We then consolidated these themes into a learner-needs typology based on their dominant support functions: instructional-oriented needs, operational support needs, and knowledge-constructionneeds. We mapped this typology onto the Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework to assess its explanatory coverage. This mapping revealed a critical systemic gap. Operational support needs, covering environment configuration, tool integration, dependency management, and technical troubleshooting, constituted the largest category (44.53% of theme-level discourse), exceeding both knowledge-construction needs (28.42%) and instructional-oriented needs (26.95%). Learners repeatedly described these infrastructure-level challenges as disrupting their attempts to engage with content, execute code for testing ideas, and coordinate with peers, yet these operational readiness needs are not fully specified by CoI’s traditional presences. Social presence did not emerge as a standalone theme at the topic-modeling level; rather, social cues were often embedded within task-oriented troubleshooting. Based on these findings, we propose Technical Presence as a context-sensitive extension to the CoI framework, defined as the extent to which a learning community enables operational readiness through accessible infrastructure support and collaborative troubleshooting. As an infrastructural support condition, Technical Presence supports operational readiness within tool-dependent, practice-based learning: when learners report infrastructure failure, the conditions for enacting instructional design, cognitive inquiry, and peer collaboration are correspondingly weakened. These findings carry implications for content creators, platform developers, and education system designers seeking to strengthen the infrastructural foundations of technology-enhanced learning at scale. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Systems Engineering Education: Design, Practice and Development)
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13 pages, 764 KB  
Article
Diabetes-Related Stigma and Interpersonal Distress Among Adults with Diabetes: A Cross-Sectional Study of Family, Workplace, and Healthcare Settings
by Majed M. Aljabri, Bandar S. Alharbi and Endale Alemayehu Ali
Healthcare 2026, 14(12), 1705; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14121705 - 15 Jun 2026
Viewed by 137
Abstract
Background: Diabetes-related stigma is an underrecognized psychosocial factor that may contribute to emotional burden among individuals with diabetes. In Saudi Arabia, where the prevalence of diabetes is among the highest globally, limited evidence exists on how stigma across different social contexts influences [...] Read more.
Background: Diabetes-related stigma is an underrecognized psychosocial factor that may contribute to emotional burden among individuals with diabetes. In Saudi Arabia, where the prevalence of diabetes is among the highest globally, limited evidence exists on how stigma across different social contexts influences interpersonal diabetes distress. We aimed to assess the association between diabetes-related stigma and interpersonal diabetes distress and to determine whether these associations differed across family, workplace, and healthcare stigma domains among adults with diabetes in Saudi Arabia. Methods: This cross-sectional study analyzed survey data collected from 438 patients with diabetes. Diabetes-related stigma was measured using an adapted 12-item diabetes stigma scale covering family, workplace, and healthcare domains, while interpersonal diabetes distress was assessed using the Interpersonal Distress subscale of the Diabetes Distress Scale (DDS). The relationships between stigma and distress were estimated using multiple linear regression analysis adjusted for age, gender, education level, years since diagnosis, and presence of complications. Results: Participants reported moderate levels of stigma (mean: 2.50, SD: 1.08) and interpersonal distress (mean: 2.31, SD: 1.23). Higher stigma scores were strongly associated with greater interpersonal distress (β = 0.57, 95% CI: 0.48 to 0.66). Domain-specific analysis showed that workplace (β = 0.26, 95% CI: 0.10 to 0.42) and healthcare stigma (β = 0.23, 95% CI: 0.07 to 0.38) were significantly associated with distress, while family stigma was not. Individuals with diabetes complications had higher distress (β = 0.49, 95% CI: 0.25 to 0.73). No evidence of effect modification by gender or education was observed. Spline models confirmed a positive and strengthening association at higher levels of stigma. Conclusions: Diabetes-related stigma is a strong and consistent factor associated with interpersonal diabetes distress in Saudi Arabia, with workplace and healthcare stigma demonstrating the strongest associations. These findings highlight the importance of addressing stigma within both social and healthcare environments and suggest that stigma reduction strategies may help alleviate the psychosocial burden associated with diabetes. Full article
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19 pages, 869 KB  
Article
Pornography, Subjectivity, and Rural Masculinities in Brazil
by Mychaell França, Samuel Santos, Washington Allysson Dantas Silva and Camilla Silva
Psychol. Int. 2026, 8(2), 36; https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint8020036 - 15 Jun 2026
Viewed by 783
Abstract
Given the moral barriers that hinder critical analysis of pornography, this study aims, through a qualitative approach with 15 participants, to examine its impacts on the construction of masculinity and the social relationships of men from the semi-arid region of Paraíba, Brazil. Data [...] Read more.
Given the moral barriers that hinder critical analysis of pornography, this study aims, through a qualitative approach with 15 participants, to examine its impacts on the construction of masculinity and the social relationships of men from the semi-arid region of Paraíba, Brazil. Data were collected via an online form, which included a sociodemographic questionnaire and open-ended questions on the topic. The data were analyzed using dialogical maps within the framework of discourse analysis. Results show that pornography is a constant and influential presence in the participants’ lives, often beginning at an early age and reinforced by social interaction. Its consumption goes beyond personal satisfaction, also serving as a tool for social comparison, shaping male subjectivity and relational dynamics. In sum, the study highlights the cultural impact of pornography in a context where critical discussions about sexuality remain limited due to the prevalence of traditional gender norms and male chauvinism. Full article
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26 pages, 10654 KB  
Article
Supply–Demand Matching of Ecosystem Services in Rapidly Urbanizing Areas and Its Driving Mechanism: From the Perspective of the “Water–Energy–Food” Nexus
by Bingsheng Fu, Guoqing Li, Dongkai Lin, Guoxing Huang, Jinhuang Lin, Jixing Huang and Youquan Ouyang
Land 2026, 15(6), 1050; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15061050 - 13 Jun 2026
Viewed by 160
Abstract
The water–energy–food (WEF) system acts as a critical nexus of social–ecological systems. However, rapid urbanization has intensified the regional imbalance in the supply and demand of ecosystem services (ESs). Clarifying the spatiotemporal matching of ecosystem services supply and demand (ESSD) within the WEF [...] Read more.
The water–energy–food (WEF) system acts as a critical nexus of social–ecological systems. However, rapid urbanization has intensified the regional imbalance in the supply and demand of ecosystem services (ESs). Clarifying the spatiotemporal matching of ecosystem services supply and demand (ESSD) within the WEF framework and revealing the driving mechanisms behind such imbalances are essential to formulating reasonable zoning schemes and targeted optimization strategies for the coordinated development of the regional WEF system. Taking Zhejiang Province as a case study, this research uses water yield (WY), carbon sequestration (CS), and grain production (GP) to characterize the WEF nexus system. It uses the InVEST model to assess WY and CS, applies spatial allocation methods to characterize GP, and integrates socioeconomic data to quantify the demand for the above three ESs. All indicators were standardized and integrated with equal weights to further clarify the comprehensive levels of ESSD. By integrating the Geodetector and K-Means clustering methods, the study analyzes the supply–demand matching of ecosystem services and its driving mechanisms in Zhejiang Province during this period, thereby exploring ecological management zoning and optimization strategies within the WEF system. The study findings indicate that: (1) From the supply perspective, Zhejiang Province’s WY services demonstrate a trend of elevated activity in the southwest and diminished presence in the northeast; high values for CS services are predominantly found in the vegetation-rich areas of the northwest, while high values for GP services are clustered in the northern Zhejiang Plain; from the demand perspective, high values for all three ESs in Zhejiang Province are primarily located in economically active, densely populated urban areas. (2) The correlation between ESSD within Zhejiang Province’s WEF system exhibits significant spatial heterogeneity and is driven by the combined effects of natural and socioeconomic factors, with the interaction between these two factors often producing a synergistic effect. Specifically, annual average precipitation and population density are the dominant factors influencing WY services, NDVI and human footprint are the dominant factors influencing CS services, and population density and GDP are the dominant factors influencing GP services. (3) From 2000 to 2020, the supply–demand ratio for comprehensive ESs in Zhejiang Province generally followed a pattern of being lower in the east and higher in the west. The supply–demand imbalance of ESs intensified in the core areas of eastern cities, whereas the western regions maintained a relatively sound supply–demand balance. (4) The study classifies the counties in Zhejiang Province into four ecological management zones—ecological stable zones, ecological conservation zones, ecological control zones, and ecological restoration zones—and explores differentiated approaches to optimizing these zones and implementing control strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ecology of the Landscape Capital and Urban Capital—Second Edition)
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Article
“Hope Restored”: A Pilot Feasibility Study of the Awareness, Courage, and Love (ACL) Psychosocial Intervention Targeting Psychiatric Well-Being in LGBTQ+ Adults
by Savannah M. Stidhams, Kristen M. Pedersen, Logan C. Mattingly, Annika H. Barsy and Mavis Tsai
Psychiatry Int. 2026, 7(3), 133; https://doi.org/10.3390/psychiatryint7030133 - 11 Jun 2026
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Abstract
Mental health disparities among LGBTQ+ individuals remain elevated and have been exacerbated by sociopolitical stressors following the COVID-19 pandemic. This embedded, mixed-methods pilot study examined the feasibility of a four-session Awareness, Courage, and Love (ACL) group intervention adapted for LGBTQ+ community members. The [...] Read more.
Mental health disparities among LGBTQ+ individuals remain elevated and have been exacerbated by sociopolitical stressors following the COVID-19 pandemic. This embedded, mixed-methods pilot study examined the feasibility of a four-session Awareness, Courage, and Love (ACL) group intervention adapted for LGBTQ+ community members. The two-hour intervention sessions targeted (1) contact with the authentic self, (2) self-acceptance and self-compassion, (3) value alignment, and (4) presence. Seven LGBTQ+ adults participated in intervention (n = 3) and control (n = 4) conditions. Participants completed quantitative measures evaluating facets of well-being, including social connection and self-acceptance, and provided qualitative feedback. Findings provide preliminary support for the feasibility of ACL interventions in conjunction with existing community-building strengths among LGBTQ+ individuals. Implications for interdisciplinary behavioral health settings, including psychiatric contexts, are discussed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mental Health)
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