Amédée or how to get rid of it: social representations... Ivana Markova, University of Stirling
... transformed and further developed in the present socio-cultural theories of the mind (e.g. Wertsch, 1991; Hermans and Kempen, 1993; co-constructivism (Valsiner, 1998) , dialogism in language (Linell, 1998, Rommetveit, 1998; Heen Wold, 1992; Markova and Foppa, 1990; 1991; Markova , Graumann and Foppa ...
... transformed and further developed in the present socio-cultural theories of the mind (e.g. Wertsch, 1991; Hermans and Kempen, 1993; co-constructivism (Valsiner, 1998) , dialogism in language (Linell, 1998, Rommetveit, 1998; Heen Wold, 1992; Markova and Foppa, 1990; 1991; Markova , Graumann and Foppa ...
Chapter 6: Behaviour
... Honeybees can be conditioned to seek food on a piece of blue cardboard By offering other colors to a blue-conditioned bee, Karl von Frisch found that honeybees can discriminate between yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, and UV •After a period of feeding from a dish placed on blue cardboard, the ...
... Honeybees can be conditioned to seek food on a piece of blue cardboard By offering other colors to a blue-conditioned bee, Karl von Frisch found that honeybees can discriminate between yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, and UV •After a period of feeding from a dish placed on blue cardboard, the ...
Lecture 5: a. finish learning and differential association b. social
... Criminal behavior is learned .. in interaction with others in a process of communication .. within intimate personal groups. The learning includes a) techniques and b) motives, drives, rationalizations & attitudes. 5. The specific direction is learned from definitions of the legal code as favorable ...
... Criminal behavior is learned .. in interaction with others in a process of communication .. within intimate personal groups. The learning includes a) techniques and b) motives, drives, rationalizations & attitudes. 5. The specific direction is learned from definitions of the legal code as favorable ...
Human and Molecular Genetics (HGEN)
... students in the M.S. in Genetic Counseling program or by permission of the instructor. Provides theory and context for interviewing as well as counseling skills required for genetic counseling practice. Literature and practical techniques utilized to acquire skills. There is significant reliance on ...
... students in the M.S. in Genetic Counseling program or by permission of the instructor. Provides theory and context for interviewing as well as counseling skills required for genetic counseling practice. Literature and practical techniques utilized to acquire skills. There is significant reliance on ...
HAU HAU
... I wish to second David Graeber‟s trenchant remarks. And would just add a comment about delusion. There are so many ways in which we „know‟ people these days, and we seem to inform one another so quickly, the delusion is that anthropology can side-step its own project of engagement. Anthropologists r ...
... I wish to second David Graeber‟s trenchant remarks. And would just add a comment about delusion. There are so many ways in which we „know‟ people these days, and we seem to inform one another so quickly, the delusion is that anthropology can side-step its own project of engagement. Anthropologists r ...
ANTHROPOLOGY COURSES FOR FALL 2017
... This course provides an introduction to statistical methods used within the 4-fields of Anthropology. The course motivates statistics through data analysis and visualization. It is designed for students focusing in anthropological disciplines and also useful to students of all interests. CRN-13454 A ...
... This course provides an introduction to statistical methods used within the 4-fields of Anthropology. The course motivates statistics through data analysis and visualization. It is designed for students focusing in anthropological disciplines and also useful to students of all interests. CRN-13454 A ...
Genetics and the making of Homo sapiens
... With respect to more recent hominin species, modern human craniofacial form appears to have been shaped by changes in elements that influence the spatial position of the face, neurocranium and cranial base. Modern humans are marked by greater roundedness of the cranial vault and facial retraction (t ...
... With respect to more recent hominin species, modern human craniofacial form appears to have been shaped by changes in elements that influence the spatial position of the face, neurocranium and cranial base. Modern humans are marked by greater roundedness of the cranial vault and facial retraction (t ...
1 The Arbitrariness and Normativity of Social Conventions NB
... Fundamental concepts such as rules, norms or institutions are often treated as primitive terms and used as the unanalysed building blocks of social theory. The focus of this paper – the concept of convention – is no exception in this regard. There are scant explicit references to convention as an an ...
... Fundamental concepts such as rules, norms or institutions are often treated as primitive terms and used as the unanalysed building blocks of social theory. The focus of this paper – the concept of convention – is no exception in this regard. There are scant explicit references to convention as an an ...
B. F. Skinner
... The pigeons pecked reliably, even when falling rapidly and working with warlike noise all around them. (Learned behaviour) • Skinner trained the pigeon’s to peck at a particular colored disk • This is based on Skinner’s theory of Operant Conditioning- behaviours are repeated if they are rewarded, an ...
... The pigeons pecked reliably, even when falling rapidly and working with warlike noise all around them. (Learned behaviour) • Skinner trained the pigeon’s to peck at a particular colored disk • This is based on Skinner’s theory of Operant Conditioning- behaviours are repeated if they are rewarded, an ...
Evolutionary Biology www.AssignmentPoint.com Evolutionary
... other subfields that are delimited by biological organisation level (e.g., cell biology, population biology), taxonomic level (e.g., zoology, ornithology, herpetology) or angle of approach (e.g., field biology, theoretical biology, experimental evolution, palaeontology). Usually, these intersections ...
... other subfields that are delimited by biological organisation level (e.g., cell biology, population biology), taxonomic level (e.g., zoology, ornithology, herpetology) or angle of approach (e.g., field biology, theoretical biology, experimental evolution, palaeontology). Usually, these intersections ...
Evolutionary Game Theory First published Mon Jan 14, 2002
... We interpret this diagram as follows: the leftmost point represents the state of the population where everyone defects, the rightmost point represents the state where everyone cooperates, and intermediate points represent states where some proportion of the population defects and the remainder coope ...
... We interpret this diagram as follows: the leftmost point represents the state of the population where everyone defects, the rightmost point represents the state where everyone cooperates, and intermediate points represent states where some proportion of the population defects and the remainder coope ...
Pitchers et al resubmission to Phil Trans Feb2014
... selection’, ‘selection gradient’ or ‘selection differential’. Unlike Kingsolver et al [30-38] ...
... selection’, ‘selection gradient’ or ‘selection differential’. Unlike Kingsolver et al [30-38] ...
History and Theory in Anthropology - Assets
... This book began life as a set of lecture notes for a course in anthropological theory, but it has evolved into something very diVerent. In struggling through several drafts, I have toyed with arguments for regarding anthropological theory in terms of the history of ideas, the development of national ...
... This book began life as a set of lecture notes for a course in anthropological theory, but it has evolved into something very diVerent. In struggling through several drafts, I have toyed with arguments for regarding anthropological theory in terms of the history of ideas, the development of national ...
- Philsci
... Natural selection theory stakes its claim to being the central unifying concept in biology on the grounds that it demonstrates both phenomena to be the consequence of a single process. By now the standard story hardly needs reiterating: Natural selection is a force that operates over a population, p ...
... Natural selection theory stakes its claim to being the central unifying concept in biology on the grounds that it demonstrates both phenomena to be the consequence of a single process. By now the standard story hardly needs reiterating: Natural selection is a force that operates over a population, p ...
Scope of Social Anthropology - General Guide To Personal and
... myths, philosophy, Sanskrit, etc., brought focus to the values that European history was suppressing. • Consequently the study of anthropology was based on the view that something was ‘european’ ‘oriental’- and something else ‘indigenous’ and ‘primitive’. This fostered the idea that anthropologists ...
... myths, philosophy, Sanskrit, etc., brought focus to the values that European history was suppressing. • Consequently the study of anthropology was based on the view that something was ‘european’ ‘oriental’- and something else ‘indigenous’ and ‘primitive’. This fostered the idea that anthropologists ...
The evolutionary links between fixed and variable traits - AGRO
... The developmental problems posed by gene and trait recombination. - In asexual organisms, mutations add variation sequentially, only rarely in parallel; the selection pressure to canalize traits against genetic perturbations will be steady but small. In sexual organisms, progeny encounter the proble ...
... The developmental problems posed by gene and trait recombination. - In asexual organisms, mutations add variation sequentially, only rarely in parallel; the selection pressure to canalize traits against genetic perturbations will be steady but small. In sexual organisms, progeny encounter the proble ...
Understanding Gang Theories - National Gang Crime Research
... inconsistencies and lack of harmony in the influences, which direct the individual. Third, the conflict of cultures is therefore the fundamental principle in the explanation of crime (Sutherland 1934:51-52). Put another way, “just as people must learn though socialization how to conform to their soc ...
... inconsistencies and lack of harmony in the influences, which direct the individual. Third, the conflict of cultures is therefore the fundamental principle in the explanation of crime (Sutherland 1934:51-52). Put another way, “just as people must learn though socialization how to conform to their soc ...
SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY: An Agentic Perspective
... Agency refers to acts done intentionally. For example, a person who smashed a vase in an antique shop upon being tripped by another shopper would not be considered the agent of the event. Human transactions, of course, involve situational inducements, but they do not operate as determinate forces. I ...
... Agency refers to acts done intentionally. For example, a person who smashed a vase in an antique shop upon being tripped by another shopper would not be considered the agent of the event. Human transactions, of course, involve situational inducements, but they do not operate as determinate forces. I ...
Social semantics: how useful has group selection been?
... (in contrast to the stunning list of kin selection successes given in Table 1); (c) they actually provide strong support for the points made in our original paper (West et al., 2007b). Population viscosity Wilson’s first example of the insights provided by group selection is the effect of population ...
... (in contrast to the stunning list of kin selection successes given in Table 1); (c) they actually provide strong support for the points made in our original paper (West et al., 2007b). Population viscosity Wilson’s first example of the insights provided by group selection is the effect of population ...
Reprint - Queen`s University Department of Mathematics and Statistics.
... individuals of a single species and I determine the conditions that must be satisfied for there to be a single, evolutionarily stable resource exploitation strategy (i.e., an ESS). This analysis is used for two purposes. First, it is used to determine how such ESS’s are affected by the genetic struc ...
... individuals of a single species and I determine the conditions that must be satisfied for there to be a single, evolutionarily stable resource exploitation strategy (i.e., an ESS). This analysis is used for two purposes. First, it is used to determine how such ESS’s are affected by the genetic struc ...
Social Ontology, Philosophically
... My question, however, is simply a lead-in to explaining what I mean by “social ontology.” Different things can be named by this term, and no one rendering is the correct one. What is most relevant to judging the cogency of an explication of social ontology is whether it (1) picks out a real feature ...
... My question, however, is simply a lead-in to explaining what I mean by “social ontology.” Different things can be named by this term, and no one rendering is the correct one. What is most relevant to judging the cogency of an explication of social ontology is whether it (1) picks out a real feature ...
Origins of evolutionary transitions
... history, which have repeatedly rewritten the evolutionary rulebooks by radically reorganizing the terms under which natural selection is played out. It is not therefore surprising that biologists and philosophers have been enraptured for some time now by the set of puzzles that understanding the maj ...
... history, which have repeatedly rewritten the evolutionary rulebooks by radically reorganizing the terms under which natural selection is played out. It is not therefore surprising that biologists and philosophers have been enraptured for some time now by the set of puzzles that understanding the maj ...
Thurs
... 12. Define the following terms: a. Heterochrony b. Allometric growth c. Paedomorphosis d. Homeotic genes 13. What impact have the Hox genes had on vertebrates? 14. How does the evolution of the horse exemplify the concept that evolution is driven by the interactions of the organism and its environme ...
... 12. Define the following terms: a. Heterochrony b. Allometric growth c. Paedomorphosis d. Homeotic genes 13. What impact have the Hox genes had on vertebrates? 14. How does the evolution of the horse exemplify the concept that evolution is driven by the interactions of the organism and its environme ...
ORGANISATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
... more about their opinions with respect to their work, working conditions and supervision. The workers suggested that: Psychological factors help determine whether a worker is satisfied or dissatisfied in any particular work situation The person’s need for self-actualization determines his/her satisf ...
... more about their opinions with respect to their work, working conditions and supervision. The workers suggested that: Psychological factors help determine whether a worker is satisfied or dissatisfied in any particular work situation The person’s need for self-actualization determines his/her satisf ...
Hidden Randomness between Fitness Landscapes
... first experimental observation of such a decline. In addition, we find a measure of the local correlation between two landscapes that well predicts the rate of this decay. -lactam antibiotics, which kill bacteria by inhibiting cell wall synthesis, are both the oldest and most widely used class of a ...
... first experimental observation of such a decline. In addition, we find a measure of the local correlation between two landscapes that well predicts the rate of this decay. -lactam antibiotics, which kill bacteria by inhibiting cell wall synthesis, are both the oldest and most widely used class of a ...