
The Effect of Acetaminophen on Social Pain
... style as well, but also in his clinical perspectives. Dr. Will Farrell helped provide a critical perspective on existing affective neuroscience research as well. Outside of my committee, Dr. Donald Robertson and Dr. Mei Ng both were instrumental in helping develop the statistical analysis used in th ...
... style as well, but also in his clinical perspectives. Dr. Will Farrell helped provide a critical perspective on existing affective neuroscience research as well. Outside of my committee, Dr. Donald Robertson and Dr. Mei Ng both were instrumental in helping develop the statistical analysis used in th ...
Telling Jokes That Disparage Social Groups
... which various characteristics were descriptive of the target group. It was expected that participants who read disparaging humor would rate stereotypic characteristics as more descriptive of the target group than would participants who read nondisparaging humor. Despite the variety of manipulations ...
... which various characteristics were descriptive of the target group. It was expected that participants who read disparaging humor would rate stereotypic characteristics as more descriptive of the target group than would participants who read nondisparaging humor. Despite the variety of manipulations ...
Treating thoughts as material objects can increase or decrease their
... After listing his or her thoughts about the diet, each participant was randomly assigned to complete either the thoughtdisposal, thought-protection, or control task. Participants in the thought-disposal condition received instructions to remove the page on which they wrote their thoughts from the re ...
... After listing his or her thoughts about the diet, each participant was randomly assigned to complete either the thoughtdisposal, thought-protection, or control task. Participants in the thought-disposal condition received instructions to remove the page on which they wrote their thoughts from the re ...
- ePrints Soton
... members (Guillaume et al., 2012; van Knippenberg et al., 2004). People also tend to hold stereotypes and behavioral expectations about others from different countries of origin. Members will categorize each other based on their provenance because they view in-group members as more trustworthy and wi ...
... members (Guillaume et al., 2012; van Knippenberg et al., 2004). People also tend to hold stereotypes and behavioral expectations about others from different countries of origin. Members will categorize each other based on their provenance because they view in-group members as more trustworthy and wi ...
Advertising Empirical Generalizations: Implications for Research
... • As an initial set of tentative rules that management can follow. Or, if they feel the conditions under which the EG holds have changed, they can design their advertising strategy as an experiment to test this theory. These hypotheses can encompass all the relevant advertising decisions including t ...
... • As an initial set of tentative rules that management can follow. Or, if they feel the conditions under which the EG holds have changed, they can design their advertising strategy as an experiment to test this theory. These hypotheses can encompass all the relevant advertising decisions including t ...
Explaining Membership in the British National Party: A Multilevel
... prerogatives’—leads to threat theory. The majority’s perception of threat should increase with the numerical size of the minority. ‘Migration of a visibly different group into a given area increases the likelihood of conflict; the probability of conflict is greater . . . the larger the ratio of the ...
... prerogatives’—leads to threat theory. The majority’s perception of threat should increase with the numerical size of the minority. ‘Migration of a visibly different group into a given area increases the likelihood of conflict; the probability of conflict is greater . . . the larger the ratio of the ...
Schneider F Degrowth Paris april 2008 paper
... demand elasticity. Some technologies are definitely more prone to rebound than other and also contribute to transformational effects towards growth. Different strategies of efficiencies or sufficiencies are not at all equivalent. One important question: what type of solution are we talking about? Is ...
... demand elasticity. Some technologies are definitely more prone to rebound than other and also contribute to transformational effects towards growth. Different strategies of efficiencies or sufficiencies are not at all equivalent. One important question: what type of solution are we talking about? Is ...
BNP paper4.2
... Why do some people in the majority denigrate or dislike minorities defined by ethnicity, race, religion, or foreign birth? Why in some does this animosity dominate other political issues, leading them to vote for—or even join—parties of the extreme right? According to an enduring sociological theor ...
... Why do some people in the majority denigrate or dislike minorities defined by ethnicity, race, religion, or foreign birth? Why in some does this animosity dominate other political issues, leading them to vote for—or even join—parties of the extreme right? According to an enduring sociological theor ...
It`s Not What You Say, It`s How You Say It
... and the empirically proven effects associated with such regular consumption have led scholars to consider violent media a public health threat, the risks of which, the public may not even fully appreciate (Huesmann, Dubow, & Yang, 2013). Previous research in the field of public health communication ...
... and the empirically proven effects associated with such regular consumption have led scholars to consider violent media a public health threat, the risks of which, the public may not even fully appreciate (Huesmann, Dubow, & Yang, 2013). Previous research in the field of public health communication ...
ADVERTISING TYPOLOGIES
... of categories and consistency of classification have been raised. Laskey et al (1989) found that some message types were evident in the same advertisement and that coding of particular advertisements was difficult and inconsistent because of the lack of definitive distance between categories such as ...
... of categories and consistency of classification have been raised. Laskey et al (1989) found that some message types were evident in the same advertisement and that coding of particular advertisements was difficult and inconsistent because of the lack of definitive distance between categories such as ...
studies - International Journal of Communication
... research has examined news stereotype effects on implicit attitudes. The scant research that does exist generally suggests that implicit measures may reveal (detrimental) media effects on individuals that otherwise would have been hidden had only explicit measures been used (e.g., Arendt, 2012). Thi ...
... research has examined news stereotype effects on implicit attitudes. The scant research that does exist generally suggests that implicit measures may reveal (detrimental) media effects on individuals that otherwise would have been hidden had only explicit measures been used (e.g., Arendt, 2012). Thi ...
Communication without Agents? From Agent-Oriented to
... 2. Observability and unobservability. Any message can be seen from two perspectives: as a physical representation of an inception or as physical representation of a reception. A message, according to our theory of communication, is an empirically perceivable object. However, it is an object of a ver ...
... 2. Observability and unobservability. Any message can be seen from two perspectives: as a physical representation of an inception or as physical representation of a reception. A message, according to our theory of communication, is an empirically perceivable object. However, it is an object of a ver ...
Calculating the main alternatives to null-hypothesis
... of information provided. Thus, several authors (for example, Carver, 1978; Cohen, 1990, 1994; Oakes, 1986; Rozeboom, 1960) consider that NHST and statistical inference have different aims. Regarding statistical inference, an attempt is made to know the probability of H0 being true considering the re ...
... of information provided. Thus, several authors (for example, Carver, 1978; Cohen, 1990, 1994; Oakes, 1986; Rozeboom, 1960) consider that NHST and statistical inference have different aims. Regarding statistical inference, an attempt is made to know the probability of H0 being true considering the re ...
Effective counterargumantation - Tuck
... equally strong negative product information without directly attacking the specific claims in the ad. Research on trait inference reveals another aspect of refutational counter claims that should be considered. Social psychological research suggests that when communicators describe negative traits i ...
... equally strong negative product information without directly attacking the specific claims in the ad. Research on trait inference reveals another aspect of refutational counter claims that should be considered. Social psychological research suggests that when communicators describe negative traits i ...
Correspondence Bias in Performance Evaluation
... relative standing, the difference between his or her GPA and the average for the college was also specifically shown. This list of classes was counterbalanced across all conditions so as not to confound it with experimental condition. For each candidate, participants were asked to (a) evaluate how s ...
... relative standing, the difference between his or her GPA and the average for the college was also specifically shown. This list of classes was counterbalanced across all conditions so as not to confound it with experimental condition. For each candidate, participants were asked to (a) evaluate how s ...
Journal of Consumer Research - Tuck School of Business | MBA
... equally strong negative product information without directly attacking the specific claims in the ad. Research on trait inference reveals another aspect of refutational counter arguments that should be considered. Social psychological research suggests that when communicators describe negative trait ...
... equally strong negative product information without directly attacking the specific claims in the ad. Research on trait inference reveals another aspect of refutational counter arguments that should be considered. Social psychological research suggests that when communicators describe negative trait ...
The effects of perceived dominance in persuasion
... These three variables, and especially expertise and trustworthiness, have repeatedly been used to define source credibility. As for recent examples, Ohanian (1990) identifies source credibility as a three dimensional construct composed of expertise, trustworthiness, and attractiveness. In this, sou ...
... These three variables, and especially expertise and trustworthiness, have repeatedly been used to define source credibility. As for recent examples, Ohanian (1990) identifies source credibility as a three dimensional construct composed of expertise, trustworthiness, and attractiveness. In this, sou ...
Do Animals Living in Larger Groups Experience Greater Parasitism
... implementation. Methods are now available, for example, to quantify the degree to which nonsignificant findings are underreported and correct for this bias (i.e., publication bias; Borenstein et al. 2009). It is also possible to conduct meta-analyses in a phylogenetic context by assessing whether ph ...
... implementation. Methods are now available, for example, to quantify the degree to which nonsignificant findings are underreported and correct for this bias (i.e., publication bias; Borenstein et al. 2009). It is also possible to conduct meta-analyses in a phylogenetic context by assessing whether ph ...
Neighborhood Effects: Accomplishments and Looking Beyond Them
... neighborhood effects, or more generally, of social interactions, poses complex econometric questions. Their resolution may be critical for a multitude of phenomena in economic and social life and for matters of public policy. Broadly speaking, social interactions arise when individuals (or household ...
... neighborhood effects, or more generally, of social interactions, poses complex econometric questions. Their resolution may be critical for a multitude of phenomena in economic and social life and for matters of public policy. Broadly speaking, social interactions arise when individuals (or household ...
Five Challenges for the Future of Media
... media content on different types of prosocial behavior (Mares & Woodard, 2007). Finally, most other meta-analyses that synthesize the media-effects literature (e.g., see the chapters in Preiss et al., 2007) have yielded effect sizes that fall within the range of what Cohen (1988) classifies as small ...
... media content on different types of prosocial behavior (Mares & Woodard, 2007). Finally, most other meta-analyses that synthesize the media-effects literature (e.g., see the chapters in Preiss et al., 2007) have yielded effect sizes that fall within the range of what Cohen (1988) classifies as small ...
Richard Baldwin Working
... liberalization will have dynamic effects on output and welfare as the economy moves to its new steady state, in addition to its usual static effects. The output impact of this dynamic effect is measurable and appears to be quite large. The welfare impact of this dynamic effect is also measurable. Th ...
... liberalization will have dynamic effects on output and welfare as the economy moves to its new steady state, in addition to its usual static effects. The output impact of this dynamic effect is measurable and appears to be quite large. The welfare impact of this dynamic effect is also measurable. Th ...
Stories and Social Networks Warren Sack
... technologies are very different from the story understanding technologies of an older, symbolic AI, but they have some affinities with techniques of newer AI work in agent-based architectures for information filtering and recommendation. Thus, for example, the “meaning” of a movie or television show ...
... technologies are very different from the story understanding technologies of an older, symbolic AI, but they have some affinities with techniques of newer AI work in agent-based architectures for information filtering and recommendation. Thus, for example, the “meaning” of a movie or television show ...
Topic 1 - Social Sciences
... How is sociology useful in making and implementing policies in areas such as education, welfare and criminal justice? Education- can find out why certain groups are underachieving and come up with ways to stop these groups underachieving e.g. boys Welfare- can find out which groups struggle the mos ...
... How is sociology useful in making and implementing policies in areas such as education, welfare and criminal justice? Education- can find out why certain groups are underachieving and come up with ways to stop these groups underachieving e.g. boys Welfare- can find out which groups struggle the mos ...
Studying society - Social Sciences
... How is sociology useful in making and implementing policies in areas such as education, welfare and criminal justice? Education- can find out why certain groups are underachieving and come up with ways to stop these groups underachieving e.g. boys Welfare- can find out which groups struggle the mos ...
... How is sociology useful in making and implementing policies in areas such as education, welfare and criminal justice? Education- can find out why certain groups are underachieving and come up with ways to stop these groups underachieving e.g. boys Welfare- can find out which groups struggle the mos ...