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PPT - streammining.org
... nodes for target user has been found useful in many applications, for example: personalized recommendation target advertising personal product promotion personal behavior prediction ...
... nodes for target user has been found useful in many applications, for example: personalized recommendation target advertising personal product promotion personal behavior prediction ...
Empowerment dynamics in collective action
... rally or something, which is what I said to this policeman, actually I said ‘I would actually go and help in a campaign like the north-circular or elsewhere for the day and that would make me an outsider there wouldn’t it’, and he said ‘yes well I suppose it would’ [ ] that’s what I’m saying when I ...
... rally or something, which is what I said to this policeman, actually I said ‘I would actually go and help in a campaign like the north-circular or elsewhere for the day and that would make me an outsider there wouldn’t it’, and he said ‘yes well I suppose it would’ [ ] that’s what I’m saying when I ...
abstract of the dissertation - School of Social Ecology
... toward maintaining harmony were associated with less exposure, whereas greater interpersonal control strivings directed toward preserving emotional health when ...
... toward maintaining harmony were associated with less exposure, whereas greater interpersonal control strivings directed toward preserving emotional health when ...
On the Complexities of Time and Temporality: Implications for World
... remain essentially similar across various locations.4 Moreover, action can become detached from location. Facilities such as long-distance mobile phone calls, the internet and trans-continental flights have further contributed to the (relative) detachment of action from location or any particular pl ...
... remain essentially similar across various locations.4 Moreover, action can become detached from location. Facilities such as long-distance mobile phone calls, the internet and trans-continental flights have further contributed to the (relative) detachment of action from location or any particular pl ...
Social Psychology as Social Construction: The Emerging Vision
... explanations, and novel insights into the wellsprings of human conduct. Aren't these efforts all adventures in interpretation? And if they are, don't they contribute to the interpretive mix within the society? Aren't they pressing our interpretations in new directions, and thus affecting our actions ...
... explanations, and novel insights into the wellsprings of human conduct. Aren't these efforts all adventures in interpretation? And if they are, don't they contribute to the interpretive mix within the society? Aren't they pressing our interpretations in new directions, and thus affecting our actions ...
A Social Network perspective of Conway`s Law
... Conway’s Law states “Organizations which design systems are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations”. [3] Such a link means that "software" has to be reconceived as a socio-technical concept. Measurement, analysis, understanding, restruc ...
... Conway’s Law states “Organizations which design systems are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations”. [3] Such a link means that "software" has to be reconceived as a socio-technical concept. Measurement, analysis, understanding, restruc ...
doc[1] - WordPress.com
... productive conditions under which it appears, it is an expression of a state of relationships, just as psychology is (as content and form) and is functioning as a regulatory apparatus. From the perspective of Critical Social Psychology, what conventional psychology terms mental entities, or, psychic ...
... productive conditions under which it appears, it is an expression of a state of relationships, just as psychology is (as content and form) and is functioning as a regulatory apparatus. From the perspective of Critical Social Psychology, what conventional psychology terms mental entities, or, psychic ...
Explaining Social Behavior: More Nuts and Bolts
... of an explanation in the social sciences is the demonstration that an action was performed because it was a rational thing to do (p. 53). However, Elster also holds that “proverbial folk wisdom has identified many such patterns” (p. 37). So, ‘absence makes the heart grow fonder’, ‘opposites attract’ ...
... of an explanation in the social sciences is the demonstration that an action was performed because it was a rational thing to do (p. 53). However, Elster also holds that “proverbial folk wisdom has identified many such patterns” (p. 37). So, ‘absence makes the heart grow fonder’, ‘opposites attract’ ...
the role of natural resources and the social capital in eu`s growth
... of social capital. Becker, James Coleman and Robert Putnam gave the contemporary use of term social capital (Lehtonen, 2004). For Coleman (1988) “social capital is a variety of different entities, with two elements in common: they all consist of some aspect of social structures, and they facilitate ...
... of social capital. Becker, James Coleman and Robert Putnam gave the contemporary use of term social capital (Lehtonen, 2004). For Coleman (1988) “social capital is a variety of different entities, with two elements in common: they all consist of some aspect of social structures, and they facilitate ...
on the social construction of race
... philosopher John Searle addresses the theories of the “strong” constructionists: “We live in exactly one world, not two or three or seventeen . . . . But the existence of phenomena which are not in any obvious way physical or chemical gives rise to puzzlement.”11 To Searle, language does prevent ...
... philosopher John Searle addresses the theories of the “strong” constructionists: “We live in exactly one world, not two or three or seventeen . . . . But the existence of phenomena which are not in any obvious way physical or chemical gives rise to puzzlement.”11 To Searle, language does prevent ...
Independent variable
... Preschool school children were randomly divided into two groups. Children in one group were asked to wait in a room by themselves while they watched a short film. This film depicted adults engaging in violent behaviors directed at an inflatable clown doll (the Bobo doll). These behaviors included hi ...
... Preschool school children were randomly divided into two groups. Children in one group were asked to wait in a room by themselves while they watched a short film. This film depicted adults engaging in violent behaviors directed at an inflatable clown doll (the Bobo doll). These behaviors included hi ...
PLAY LEADERSHIP IN AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN
... • Role of adults in children’s play in preschool settings were founded on the views of Friedrich Froebel and the early child development research centers. • Froebel (1887) viewed play as important for developing the mind , body, and character. • Early leaders in the nursery-kindergarten movement pro ...
... • Role of adults in children’s play in preschool settings were founded on the views of Friedrich Froebel and the early child development research centers. • Froebel (1887) viewed play as important for developing the mind , body, and character. • Early leaders in the nursery-kindergarten movement pro ...
1 / What Is Social Constructionism?
... in the sociology of knowledge (Bloor 1982), about whom I have more to say below.4 Because social constructionists tend to stress the diverse meanings social actors confer on their experiences, Weber’s role in legitimating and popularizing Verstehen sociology must be acknowledged as an important prec ...
... in the sociology of knowledge (Bloor 1982), about whom I have more to say below.4 Because social constructionists tend to stress the diverse meanings social actors confer on their experiences, Weber’s role in legitimating and popularizing Verstehen sociology must be acknowledged as an important prec ...
Naturalisms and Antinaturalisms
... In Oxford, at much the same time, the late 1960s and early 1970s, Rom Harré and Roy Bhaskar were developing their realist metatheory of science, drawing in particular on the work of Mary Hesse. Both Harré and Bhaskar, like Habermas, were substantially motivated by the desire to undermine positivisti ...
... In Oxford, at much the same time, the late 1960s and early 1970s, Rom Harré and Roy Bhaskar were developing their realist metatheory of science, drawing in particular on the work of Mary Hesse. Both Harré and Bhaskar, like Habermas, were substantially motivated by the desire to undermine positivisti ...
CHAPTER 14 IMPORTANT NEXT STEPS IN PHRONETIC SOCIAL
... because these setups are perfect, but because they are the best we have for collective decision making. From a phronetic perspective, social science works best not when it tries to give us the unrealizable perfection of expert knowledge, such as that which comes from abstract models, but instead whe ...
... because these setups are perfect, but because they are the best we have for collective decision making. From a phronetic perspective, social science works best not when it tries to give us the unrealizable perfection of expert knowledge, such as that which comes from abstract models, but instead whe ...
Social and Cultural Development of Human Resources
... studies of the brain, while others analyze specific behavioral patterns. Others investigate how humans process information, and interpret phenomena. As scientists they observe and study behavioral manifestations, and investigate both conscious and unconscious mental states that are inferred from obs ...
... studies of the brain, while others analyze specific behavioral patterns. Others investigate how humans process information, and interpret phenomena. As scientists they observe and study behavioral manifestations, and investigate both conscious and unconscious mental states that are inferred from obs ...
1 Proposal for the Co-Editorship of Social Psychology Quarterly
... university-based social science research organizations which he established and directed. During this same time, Stets focused on the development of a very theoretically driven research program. We see these differences in our research trajectories as assets in both understanding and valuing scholar ...
... university-based social science research organizations which he established and directed. During this same time, Stets focused on the development of a very theoretically driven research program. We see these differences in our research trajectories as assets in both understanding and valuing scholar ...
lecture13
... • Particle simulations, particle-in-cell (PIC) methods • tree-structured computations (Barnes Hut, etc.) • grid computations with dynamically changing grid, which changes slowly High Performance Computing 1 ...
... • Particle simulations, particle-in-cell (PIC) methods • tree-structured computations (Barnes Hut, etc.) • grid computations with dynamically changing grid, which changes slowly High Performance Computing 1 ...
Available - Guru Ghasidas Vishwavidyalaya
... Social Work methods are purely professional knowledge, not barrowed from any other disciplines. It is also called social work practice. These methods and application differentiate social work and many others social sciences that base mere on theoretical knowledge. For instance, sociology, psychology ...
... Social Work methods are purely professional knowledge, not barrowed from any other disciplines. It is also called social work practice. These methods and application differentiate social work and many others social sciences that base mere on theoretical knowledge. For instance, sociology, psychology ...
Slides (PDF).
... • Multi-task operating systems • User accounts • File systems • Functionality available for reuse ...
... • Multi-task operating systems • User accounts • File systems • Functionality available for reuse ...
History of and in Sociology Introduction to the Didactic Seminar on
... reconstructions of thinkers’ situations within critical comparisons. But that hybrid effort will turn out to produce its own perplexities when it comes to tracing causal chains. Let’s see if it works out that way. No intellectual historian myself but an enthusiast for comparative-historical analysis ...
... reconstructions of thinkers’ situations within critical comparisons. But that hybrid effort will turn out to produce its own perplexities when it comes to tracing causal chains. Let’s see if it works out that way. No intellectual historian myself but an enthusiast for comparative-historical analysis ...
PowerPoint Presentation - Topics in the Philosophy of Social Science
... Much of this comes down to a view about what we can know, or can know best: the local, the direct, the unmediated. So there is an underlying positivism to the insistence on the local. Another strong impulse towards the local comes from a perception that variation and novelty are more significant ...
... Much of this comes down to a view about what we can know, or can know best: the local, the direct, the unmediated. So there is an underlying positivism to the insistence on the local. Another strong impulse towards the local comes from a perception that variation and novelty are more significant ...
The Fundamental Question of Sociology
... provided with by our social background. When Weber talks of the Rationalization of society this is true in the sense of a dynamic unfolding of an implicit orientation to society, but it is not true in the sense of an objective process happening in the external world. When Spencer talks of the evolut ...
... provided with by our social background. When Weber talks of the Rationalization of society this is true in the sense of a dynamic unfolding of an implicit orientation to society, but it is not true in the sense of an objective process happening in the external world. When Spencer talks of the evolut ...