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Trond Nordfjærn

Researcher at Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Publications -  113
Citations -  2691

Trond Nordfjærn is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Population. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 109 publications receiving 1980 citations. Previous affiliations of Trond Nordfjærn include Gediz University & Norwegian Institute for Alcohol and Drug Research.

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Acceptance of disincentives to driving and pro-environmental transport intentions: the role of value structure, environmental beliefs and norm activation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate values, environmental beliefs and norm activation as predictors of these psychological cognitions and examine gender differences in the psychological constructs entered into the model, finding that females reported stronger biospheric and altruistic values, and weaker egoistic and hedonic values than males.
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Socio-demographic, lifestyle and psychological predictors of benzodiazepine and z-hypnotic use patterns.

TL;DR: Smoking, sleep difficulties and old age were positively associated with prescriptions of high benzodiazepine doses, while exercise was associated with lower doses, and non-pharmacological treatment for sleep difficulties, smoking cessation and smoking cessation may reduce the risk of chronic benzdiazepine use.
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Mono- and multimodal green transport use on university trips during winter and summer: Hybrid choice models on the norm-activation theory

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of environmental norms and beliefs as well as socioeconomic and situational characteristics on multimodal and monomodal green transport and car use on university trips during winter and summertime in Norway were investigated.
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Comparison of drugs used by nightclub patrons and criminal offenders in Oslo, Norway.

TL;DR: The results showed that the drug use pattern among nightclub patrons was substantially different from theDrug use pattern manifested by individuals apprehended by the police suspected for criminal conduct.
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Does the value-belief-norm theory predict acceptance of disincentives to driving and active mode choice preferences for children's school travels among Chinese parents?

TL;DR: The authors examined the extent to which the value-belief-norm (VBN) theory predicts acceptance of disincentives to driving among Chinese parents and parental active transport mode use preferences (i.e., walking and bicycling) for their children's school travels above and beyond demographics, transport availability and walking evaluations.