Contents include survey results addressing: third- and first-person effects of election polling; moderators affecting burnout among nurses; two papers on factors, including family relationships and knowledge/attitudes affecting COVID-19 preventive behaviors. There is also an essay on the value of research replication and its value when compared to approaching an issue in various ways.
- Editor's NoteEIC John Kennedy discusses the reproducibility crisis and how looking at an issue from multiple perspectives with different methodologies may actually be more helpful.
- Research NoteSurvey results from South Korea suggest that how voters perceive the effects of polling news may have actual impacts on their political behaviors.
- Research NoteA survey reveals that family cohesion significantly increases COVID-19 prevention behavioral intention among undergraduate students in the Philippines.
- Research NoteSurvey results from nurses in Indonesia show work intensity and self-efficacy have a significant effect on burnout. Supervision only significantly moderates the effect of work intensity on burnout.
- Research NoteThere was a statistically significant but weak relationship between knowledge and practice and a fair relationship between attitude and practice among 857 students. There was none between knowledge and attitude.