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In this analysis the authors examine the impact of Internet use on the social networks of individuals, and also whether egocentric network characteristics have a measurable effect on the diffusion of Internet use. The empirical bases of this longitudinal analysis are three waves of the World Internet Project carried out between 2001 and 2003.
EN
Relations between shyness, sociability and various dimensions of social support were studied in a sample of 267 participants (151 females and 116 males). The age of the subjects was 19–49. Shyness and sociability appeared significant predictors of perceived social support. Sociable people generally perceived more social support than unsociable people both from relatives and colleagues. However shyness was not a predictor of perception of social support from close persons negatively influenced the perception of possibility of help from more distant persons. Shy-sociable were rarely in intimate partnerships which were an important source of support and protected from stress.
EN
This paper represents the most important findings of a pilot study examining relationships among prosocial tendencies, empathy, and five personality dimensions on a sample of 137 female university students of social work and pedagogy. The findings of this study validate the existence of a compelling relationship among prosocial tendencies, empathy, and personality dimensions in relation to openness to experience and sociability.
EN
The article discusses improvisational performances of the Philomaths in the context of the advent of a so-called modernity which correlated with a rapid change in people’s lifestyles. My starting point in examining the most characteristic phenomena of the literary life in Vilnius is the newly emerged economic environment: the enormous popularity of improvised poems (performed or written impromptu) and the development of the printed press. The analysis of the Philomaths’ performances, letters and poems focuses on various aspects of improvising, and not only on poetry presentations but also on a spontaneous way of living and the process of literary production. I argue that the improvisational activity of the Philomaths can be considered as an act of experimenting with and adapting various (traditional as well as innovative) literary patterns, and therefore as a poetic laboratory of the new romantic era.
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