http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Miko Andi WARDANA,I Ketut RAHYUDA,I Putu Gde SUKAATMADJA,I Gusti Ayu Ketut GIANTARI 한국유통과학회 2021 The Journal of Asian Finance, Economics and Busine Vol.8 No.4
The aim of the study was to examine the effect of trust, awareness, attitude, subjective norms, and behavioural control on intention and examine the mediating role of trust in the relationship between awareness and attitude. The population was Muslims in Bali Province, with a sample of 150 respondents. Quantitative analysis is used based on multivariate analysis using the SEM model with a variance-based PLS. The results are as follows: (1) knowledge has a significant positive effect on attitude. (2) Awareness has no significant effect on attitude. (3) Awareness has a significant positive effect on trust. (4) Trust has a significant positive effect on attitude. (5) Attitude has no significant effect on intention. (6) Subjective norm has a significant positive effect on intention. (7) Behaviour control has a significant positive effect on intention. (8) The role of trust is a conscious mediation that impacts attitude. The study provides insight into Islamic bank managers to meet prospective customers’ expectations and identify their intention to become customers through managing trust, awareness, attitude, subjective norms, behavioural control, and intention in one unified whole as internal resource. This study enriches empirical evidence on the Theory of Planned Behaviour, which examines knowledge, awareness, and belief.
Effective Environmental Regimes in East Asia for Climate Change and Environmental Security
Miko Maekawa 사단법인 한국평화연구학회 2014 평화학연구 Vol.15 No.6
The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of the United Nations (UN) and regional collaboration in tackling climate change and environmental security in East Asia. East Asia plays critical roles in both climate change mitigation and adaptation. In order to seek environmental sustainability, the aspect of so-called planetary boundaries also should be taken into consideration, by assessing the thresholds of climate change, biodiversity loss, nitrogen cycle, and others. However, compared to the active economic regional integration, transboundary cooperation in environmental management is rather weak. Despite the regional environmental agreements, the actual implementation and the impacts are quite limited. In East Asia, regional environmental initiatives did not evolve into formal institutions. Cases of the Montreal Protocol and Mekong River transboundary management are examined to draw concrete lessons for effective regional frameworks. Elements for success are to embrace scientific rigor and flexible legal framework for implementation, trade provisions, give support to developing countries through multilateral processes, including the UN and the broader framework for cooperation, including not only the environment, but also socio and economic bargaining. The participation of the super powers in the agreement is also crucial. The environmental concerns should be reflected in the existing regional trade and economic frameworks in the region.
Quantitative four-dimensional tracking of cytoplasmic and nuclear HIV-1 complexes
Arhel, Nathalie,Genovesio, Auguste,Kim, Kyeong-Ae,Miko, Sarah,Perret, Emmanuelle,Olivo-Marin, Jean-Christophe,Shorte, Spencer,Charneau, Pierre Nature Publishing Group 2006 Nature methods Vol.3 No.10
Emerging real-time techniques for imaging viral infections provide powerful tools for understanding the dynamics of virus-host cell interactions. Here we labeled human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) integrase with a small tetracysteine tag, which preserved the virus' infectivity while allowing it to be labeled with the bis-arsenical fluorescein derivative FlAsH. This labeling allowed us to image both intracytoplasmic and intranuclear HIV-1 complexes in three dimensions over time (4D) in human cells and enabled us to analyze HIV-1 kinetics by automated 4D quantitative particle tracking. In the cytoplasm, HIV-1 complexes underwent directed movements toward the nuclear compartment, kinetically characteristic of both microtubule- and actin-dependent transport. The complexes then adopted smaller movements in a very confined volume once associated with the nuclear membrane and more diffuse movements once inside the nucleus. This work contributes new insight into the various movements of HIV-1 complexes within infected cells and provides a useful tool for the study of virus-host cell interactions during infection.