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result(s) for
"Yan, Wei, author"
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From the Great Wall to Wall Street : a cross-cultural look at leadership and management in China and the US
Wei Yen explores how differences in world views between Eastern and Western thought and culture affect management and leadership behaviors. In The Geography of Thought, Richard Nisbett showed how the thought and culture of the East is rooted in Chinese Confucian ideals, while that of the West goes back to the early Greeks. In From Great Wall to Wall Street, Wei Yen explores how these differences impact today's leadership and management practices. He delves deeply into the two cultures and their philosophical roots, and explains why there can exist significant misunderstandings between the two camps. Yen was born in China, raised in Hong Kong, educated both there and in the US and then spent half his working life in the US and half in Asia. From his vantage point, straddling both cultures he compares and contrasts the pragmatic, wholistic Chinese (or Asian) management style with the rational and analytical Western management style. He shows their pros and cons, the areas where they differ and situations where one may be more successful than the other. Yen argues that understanding traditional Chinese culture, and how it affects management behaviors and current events, can help decision makers make better decisions in business, finance and politics.
Detecting Chinese Modernities
by
Wei, Yan
in
Chinese fiction-20th century-History and criticism
,
Detective and mystery stories, Chinese-History and criticism
2020
In Detecting Chinese Modernities: Rupture and Continuity in Modern Chinese Detective Fiction (1896-1949), Yan Wei historicizes the two stages in the development of Chinese detective fiction and discusses the rupture and continuity in the cultural transactions, mediation, and appropriation that occurred when the genre of detective fiction traveled to China during the first half of the twentieth century. Wei identifies two divergent, or even opposite strategies for appropriating Western detective fiction during the late Qing and the Republican periods. She further argues that these two periods in the domestication of detective fiction were also connected by shared emotions. Both periods expressed ambivalent and sometimes contradictory views regarding Chinese tradition and Western modernity.
Data-driven phenotypic profiling of prediabetes reveals heterogeneous cardiometabolic risks in Chinese adults
2025
Background
The heterogeneous and complex nature of prediabetes presents a major challenge in identifying individuals predisposed to developing incident diabetes and related complications. We aimed to identify phenotypic subgroups of prediabetes at risk and to explore their distinct associations with cardiometabolic outcomes.
Methods
This study included 79,000 individuals with prediabetes from the three large-scale prospective cohorts in China. Phenotypic heterogeneity was identified using a soft-clustering algorithm based on the proximity network derived from uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP), combined with graph-clustering and Gaussian mixture models. Associations between phenotype probabilities and the incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D), cardiovascular disease (CVD), and kidney events were assessed to evaluate risk differences across the identified profiles.
Results
Six phenotypic profiles were identified, including five with distinct metabolic features (representing ~ 70% of the total population), and one without significant features. These profiles demonstrated substantial differences in both baseline cardiometabolic burden and future disease risk. For instance, individuals with a 20% higher probability of belonging to the hypertensive profile had a 9, 6, and 12% higher risk of T2D, CVD, and CKD, respectively, while the profile with high lipids, creatinine, and liver enzyme was associated with an 10% increased risk of T2D and kidney events. Moreover, incorporating phenotypic probabilities into multivariable models significantly improved the prediction of disease risks (likelihood ratio test,
P
< 0.05).
Conclusions
Prediabetes exhibits substantial phenotypic heterogeneity, and delineation of distinct metabolic profiles enables refined risk stratification and informs precision prevention strategies.
Journal Article
Ancient China and its Eurasian neighbors : artifacts, identity and death in the frontier, 3000-700 BCE
\"This volume examines the role of objects in the region north of early dynastic state centers, at the intersection of Ancient China and Eurasia, a large area that stretches from Xinjiang to the China Sea, from c.3000 BCE to the mid-eighth century BCE. This area was a frontier, an ambiguous space that lay at the margins of direct political control by the metropolitan states, where local and colonial ideas and practices were reconstructed transculturally. These identities were often merged and displayed in material culture. Types of objects, styles, and iconography were often hybrids or new to the region, as were the tomb assemblages in which they were deposited and found. Patrons commissioned objects that marked a symbolic vision of place and person and that could mobilize support, legitimize rule, and bind people together.\"--Back cover.
Theater & Society
by
Yan, Haiping
in
Chinese drama
,
Chinese drama -- 20th century -- Translations into English
,
Theatre
1998,2015
Exploring one of the most dynamic and contested regions of the world, this series includes works on political, economic, cultural, and social changes in modern and contemporary Asia and the Pacific.
This text presents the work of scholars from all over Europe who examine processes of integration and disintegration at the level of nation states, federations, regions and Europe overall.