Effects of Messages About Genetics, Race, and Health on Public
... common diseases has increased substantially (Kessler et al., 2007). As progress in the field of genetics continues to occur at a rapid pace, there is growing concern about the social and ethical consequences of these advances. One area of concern that merits more empirical research is the impact of ...
... common diseases has increased substantially (Kessler et al., 2007). As progress in the field of genetics continues to occur at a rapid pace, there is growing concern about the social and ethical consequences of these advances. One area of concern that merits more empirical research is the impact of ...
Understanding Albert Camus` Absurd as Ambivalence, and its
... standard usage: “A duality of opposed emotions, attitudes, thoughts or motivations, which a person simultaneously holds towards a person or object, is the centerpiece of the standard psychoanalytically shaped definition of ambivalence” (Oxford English Dictionary 1989). More importantly, this definit ...
... standard usage: “A duality of opposed emotions, attitudes, thoughts or motivations, which a person simultaneously holds towards a person or object, is the centerpiece of the standard psychoanalytically shaped definition of ambivalence” (Oxford English Dictionary 1989). More importantly, this definit ...
UKU TOOMING The Communicative Significance of Beliefs and
... general terms, this proposal remains rather vague. Another possibility would be to articulate the difference by arguing that only desires can directly motivate behaviour while beliefs only rationalize it (Smith 1987). This claim is rather controversial (Price 1989). A third option is to distinguish ...
... general terms, this proposal remains rather vague. Another possibility would be to articulate the difference by arguing that only desires can directly motivate behaviour while beliefs only rationalize it (Smith 1987). This claim is rather controversial (Price 1989). A third option is to distinguish ...
Processes of Prejudice - Equality and Human Rights Commission
... necessarily prevent prejudice or discrimination. While several aspects of this review are strongly relevant to good relations, the primary focus is on how we can address the problems associated with prejudice against particular social groups. Section 2 (The social psychology of prejudice) summarises ...
... necessarily prevent prejudice or discrimination. While several aspects of this review are strongly relevant to good relations, the primary focus is on how we can address the problems associated with prejudice against particular social groups. Section 2 (The social psychology of prejudice) summarises ...
The Blackwell Companion to Social Theory
... identities, gender politics, and medical innovation. As a more established tradition, phenomenology has addressed questions that are fundamental to sociology as such, namely the nature of social action, interpretation, and meaning in everyday life. These new chapters provide a wider basis for unders ...
... identities, gender politics, and medical innovation. As a more established tradition, phenomenology has addressed questions that are fundamental to sociology as such, namely the nature of social action, interpretation, and meaning in everyday life. These new chapters provide a wider basis for unders ...
Moral Judgment and Decision Making
... Our focus in this chapter is moral flexibility, a term that we use that people are strongly motivated to adhere to and affirm their moral beliefs in their judgments and choices – they really want to get it right, they really want to do the right thing – but context strongly influences which moral be ...
... Our focus in this chapter is moral flexibility, a term that we use that people are strongly motivated to adhere to and affirm their moral beliefs in their judgments and choices – they really want to get it right, they really want to do the right thing – but context strongly influences which moral be ...
The Role of Construal Level in Self-Control - Labs
... it will start with breakfast and a shower, entail interacting with family members and colleagues, and end with sleep. As events become more psychologically proximal, people can engage in low-level construal, incorporating the incidental and secondary details provided by direct experience to form idi ...
... it will start with breakfast and a shower, entail interacting with family members and colleagues, and end with sleep. As events become more psychologically proximal, people can engage in low-level construal, incorporating the incidental and secondary details provided by direct experience to form idi ...
- University of Salford Institutional Repository
... in the develonment of each project and that both will be subjected to similar kinds of criticism. Thus attention to the 'Simmel in Goffman' can cast some light on the reception given to Goffman's sociology in the disci pline at large. Thirdly, Simmel's sociological work can be drawn on as an interpr ...
... in the develonment of each project and that both will be subjected to similar kinds of criticism. Thus attention to the 'Simmel in Goffman' can cast some light on the reception given to Goffman's sociology in the disci pline at large. Thirdly, Simmel's sociological work can be drawn on as an interpr ...
moral judgment and decision making - Fiery Cushman
... differently as a function of whether a given situation is governed by moral rules, social conventions, or subject to personal discretion (e.g., Nucci, 2001; Turiel, 1983). The personal domain refers to aspects of behavior that are not subject to social rules and thus permits variability in belief an ...
... differently as a function of whether a given situation is governed by moral rules, social conventions, or subject to personal discretion (e.g., Nucci, 2001; Turiel, 1983). The personal domain refers to aspects of behavior that are not subject to social rules and thus permits variability in belief an ...
Tests of Concepts
... Interaction in human group life is not a "conveyor belt" merely passing on impacts of variables. People and groups use intentions and other meanings within an interpretive process to form their adjustments to a condition like industrialization. Blumer finds that variable analysis is insensitive to t ...
... Interaction in human group life is not a "conveyor belt" merely passing on impacts of variables. People and groups use intentions and other meanings within an interpretive process to form their adjustments to a condition like industrialization. Blumer finds that variable analysis is insensitive to t ...
A map of social enterprises in Europe
... means that this initial mapping of drivers, characteristics and eco-system features should be followed by more targeted and specific research as individual policy initiatives are formulated and developed. ...
... means that this initial mapping of drivers, characteristics and eco-system features should be followed by more targeted and specific research as individual policy initiatives are formulated and developed. ...
Complexity Results for Manipulation, Bribery and
... choice procedures are resistant to strategic behavior, and under what conditions. An important research direction along these lines investigates how computational complexity can be used to establish that various social choice procedures are (in many cases) practically immune to strategic behavior [2 ...
... choice procedures are resistant to strategic behavior, and under what conditions. An important research direction along these lines investigates how computational complexity can be used to establish that various social choice procedures are (in many cases) practically immune to strategic behavior [2 ...
www.ssoar.info The psychology of counterfactual thinking
... injecting a story with counterfactuals, a storyteller may manipulate the emotions of the audience with subtlety and aplomb. A classic example is the film It’s a Wonderful Life, in which the main character is shown what his small town (and the people in it) might have been like had he never been born ...
... injecting a story with counterfactuals, a storyteller may manipulate the emotions of the audience with subtlety and aplomb. A classic example is the film It’s a Wonderful Life, in which the main character is shown what his small town (and the people in it) might have been like had he never been born ...
imageREAL Capture
... There is a muddle here about the voices within the army, just as there is a muddle about the voices within the family.15 The phrase "the group's assumption" conceals everything we need to know about the ways in which that assumption came into being, the voice or voices which established the roles an ...
... There is a muddle here about the voices within the army, just as there is a muddle about the voices within the family.15 The phrase "the group's assumption" conceals everything we need to know about the ways in which that assumption came into being, the voice or voices which established the roles an ...
d. social neuroscience
... failure to outside factors. a. halo effect b. self-serving bias c. assumed-similarity bias d. fundamental attribution error Answer: b Page: 342 Bloom’s Taxonomy: Knowledge Difficulty: Medium APA Goal: Goal 1: Knowledge Base of Psychology 40. Shaun is angry at the way a coworker has treated him. Shau ...
... failure to outside factors. a. halo effect b. self-serving bias c. assumed-similarity bias d. fundamental attribution error Answer: b Page: 342 Bloom’s Taxonomy: Knowledge Difficulty: Medium APA Goal: Goal 1: Knowledge Base of Psychology 40. Shaun is angry at the way a coworker has treated him. Shau ...
Author`s personal copy
... instance, a conflict with a colleague may threaten the employee’s self-esteem, whereas unemployment is likely to be perceived as a loss of status and income. ‘Secondary appraisal’ refers to options the person has to cope with the harm, threat, or loss. These depend on personal characteristics, such a ...
... instance, a conflict with a colleague may threaten the employee’s self-esteem, whereas unemployment is likely to be perceived as a loss of status and income. ‘Secondary appraisal’ refers to options the person has to cope with the harm, threat, or loss. These depend on personal characteristics, such a ...
Begue_Alcohol and ag.. - Lorraine et Sébastien Tournyol du Clos
... their ideal self. Likewise, Denton and Krebs (1990) showed that intoxicated subjects selfattributed more moral integrity to themselves than to others, which is consistent with the egoboost idea. In another study, Quigley, Corbett, & Tedeschi, (2002) showed that the link between alcohol consumption a ...
... their ideal self. Likewise, Denton and Krebs (1990) showed that intoxicated subjects selfattributed more moral integrity to themselves than to others, which is consistent with the egoboost idea. In another study, Quigley, Corbett, & Tedeschi, (2002) showed that the link between alcohol consumption a ...
the psychology of stereotyping
... in more obscure places and by broadening my definition of stereotypes even slightly. I have not cited most of those materials, and it has been frustrating to have to cut out many, especially older, references. This book documents major changes that have taken place in the ways we think about stereot ...
... in more obscure places and by broadening my definition of stereotypes even slightly. I have not cited most of those materials, and it has been frustrating to have to cut out many, especially older, references. This book documents major changes that have taken place in the ways we think about stereot ...
Herman - Shattered Shame 2011
... condemned.” Thus shame represents a complex form of mental representation, in which the person is able to imagine the mind of another. Developmental Origins of Shame Developmentally, shame appears in the second year of life. Erikson (1950) formulates the central conflict of this developmental stage ...
... condemned.” Thus shame represents a complex form of mental representation, in which the person is able to imagine the mind of another. Developmental Origins of Shame Developmentally, shame appears in the second year of life. Erikson (1950) formulates the central conflict of this developmental stage ...
Reviews on Social Learning Literature
... everyone simply improvises. If it sounds good, then the audience will respond appreciatively, that is to say, those who enjoy jazz music (and not everyone does…). People from the audience sometimes join in, changing the composition of the ensemble. The acoustics of the hall in which the music is pla ...
... everyone simply improvises. If it sounds good, then the audience will respond appreciatively, that is to say, those who enjoy jazz music (and not everyone does…). People from the audience sometimes join in, changing the composition of the ensemble. The acoustics of the hall in which the music is pla ...
Reviews on Social Learning Literature
... everyone simply improvises. If it sounds good, then the audience will respond appreciatively, that is to say, those who enjoy jazz music (and not everyone does…). People from the audience sometimes join in, changing the composition of the ensemble. The acoustics of the hall in which the music is pla ...
... everyone simply improvises. If it sounds good, then the audience will respond appreciatively, that is to say, those who enjoy jazz music (and not everyone does…). People from the audience sometimes join in, changing the composition of the ensemble. The acoustics of the hall in which the music is pla ...
The Ontological Assumptions of Max Weber`s Methodology
... their entirety, what type of knowledge is possible.' To Kant knowledge of the physical world was limited by the necessary interaction of subject and object. To Weber, knowledge of the social environment is of a limited nature as well. The problem of perception is further exacerbated in social scienc ...
... their entirety, what type of knowledge is possible.' To Kant knowledge of the physical world was limited by the necessary interaction of subject and object. To Weber, knowledge of the social environment is of a limited nature as well. The problem of perception is further exacerbated in social scienc ...
An introduction to cognitive dissonance theory and an overview of
... joyable, and the participant was given $1 or $20 to tell the next person (actually a female accomplice of the experimenter) that the tasks were enjoyable and to remain on call in the future. The participants were then asked to evaluate the tasks by an interviewer from the psychology department, who ...
... joyable, and the participant was given $1 or $20 to tell the next person (actually a female accomplice of the experimenter) that the tasks were enjoyable and to remain on call in the future. The participants were then asked to evaluate the tasks by an interviewer from the psychology department, who ...
Irony as a Means of Perception Through Communication Channels
... observes that we are never devoid of affect. If pragmatics is to account for the gap between what people say and what they mean, it needs to account for how they feel about what they say. Pexman and Olineck (2002) found that ironic arguments could have the intention of being more hurtful, but may no ...
... observes that we are never devoid of affect. If pragmatics is to account for the gap between what people say and what they mean, it needs to account for how they feel about what they say. Pexman and Olineck (2002) found that ironic arguments could have the intention of being more hurtful, but may no ...
Masterxthesis
... form or another by those interested in Ibsen’s drama and the aesthetic of the tragic genre. What seems an accomplished project in terms of understanding and completion is a matter yet seemingly debatable. The struggle to endorse and exhaust this theme about Ibsen and his relation to the tragic art h ...
... form or another by those interested in Ibsen’s drama and the aesthetic of the tragic genre. What seems an accomplished project in terms of understanding and completion is a matter yet seemingly debatable. The struggle to endorse and exhaust this theme about Ibsen and his relation to the tragic art h ...